30,919 research outputs found

    Comparison and Rigidity Theorems in Semi-Riemannian Geometry

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    The comparison theory for the Riccati equation satisfied by the shape operator of parallel hypersurfaces is generalized to semi-Riemannian manifolds of arbitrary index, using one-sided bounds on the Riemann tensor which in the Riemannian case correspond to one-sided bounds on the sectional curvatures. Starting from 2-dimensional rigidity results and using an inductive technique, a new class of gap-type rigidity theorems is proved for semi-Riemannian manifolds of arbitrary index, generalizing those first given by Gromov and Greene-Wu. As applications we prove rigidity results for semi-Riemannian manifolds with simply connected ends of constant curvature.Comment: 46 pages, amsart, to appear in Comm. Anal. Geo

    String Effects on Fermi--Dirac Correlation Measurements

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    We investigate some recent measurements of Fermi--Dirac correlations by the LEP collaborations indicating surprisingly small source radii for the production of baryons in e+ee^+e^--annihilation at the Z0Z^0 peak. In the hadronization models there are besides the Fermi--Dirac correlation effect also a strong dynamical (anti-)correlation. We demonstrate that the extraction of the pure FD effect is highly dependent on a realistic Monte Carlo event generator, both for separation of those dynamical correlations which are not related to Fermi--Dirac statistics, and for corrections of the data and background subtractions. Although the model can be tuned to well reproduce single particle distributions, there are large model-uncertainties when it comes to correlations between identical baryons. We therefore, unfortunately, have to conclude that it is at present not possible to make any firm conclusion about the source radii relevant for baryon production at LEP

    A Strong Maximum Principle for Weak Solutions of Quasi-Linear Elliptic Equations with Applications to Lorentzian and Riemannian Geometry

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    The strong maximum principle is proved to hold for weak (in the sense of support functions) sub- and super-solutions to a class of quasi-linear elliptic equations that includes the mean curvature equation for C0C^0 spacelike hypersurfaces in a Lorentzian manifold. As one application a Lorentzian warped product splitting theorem is given.Comment: 37 pages, 1 figure, ams-latex using eepi

    A Relativistic Mean Field Model for Entrainment in General Relativistic Superfluid Neutron Stars

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    General relativistic superfluid neutron stars have a significantly more intricate dynamics than their ordinary fluid counterparts. Superfluidity allows different superfluid (and superconducting) species of particles to have independent fluid flows, a consequence of which is that the fluid equations of motion contain as many fluid element velocities as superfluid species. Whenever the particles of one superfluid interact with those of another, the momentum of each superfluid will be a linear combination of both superfluid velocities. This leads to the so-called entrainment effect whereby the motion of one superfluid will induce a momentum in the other superfluid. We have constructed a fully relativistic model for entrainment between superfluid neutrons and superconducting protons using a relativistic σω\sigma - \omega mean field model for the nucleons and their interactions. In this context there are two notions of ``relativistic'': relativistic motion of the individual nucleons with respect to a local region of the star (i.e. a fluid element containing, say, an Avogadro's number of particles), and the motion of fluid elements with respect to the rest of the star. While it is the case that the fluid elements will typically maintain average speeds at a fraction of that of light, the supranuclear densities in the core of a neutron star can make the nucleons themselves have quite high average speeds within each fluid element. The formalism is applied to the problem of slowly-rotating superfluid neutron star configurations, a distinguishing characteristic being that the neutrons can rotate at a rate different from that of the protons.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR

    Corona-type theorems and division in some function algebras on planar domains

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    Let AA be an algebra of bounded smooth functions on the interior of a compact set in the plane. We study the following problem: if f,f1,,fnAf,f_1,\dots,f_n\in A satisfy fj=1nfj|f|\leq \sum_{j=1}^n |f_j|, does there exist gjAg_j\in A and a constant NNN\in\N such that fN=j=1ngjfjf^N=\sum_{j=1}^n g_j f_j? A prominent role in our proofs is played by a new space, C_{\dbar, 1}(K), which we call the algebra of \dbar-smooth functions. In the case n=1n=1, a complete solution is given for the algebras Am(K)A^m(K) of functions holomorphic in KK^\circ and whose first mm-derivatives extend continuously to \ov{K^\circ}. This necessitates the introduction of a special class of compacta, the so-called locally L-connected sets. We also present another constructive proof of the Nullstellensatz for A(K)A(K), that is only based on elementary \dbar-calculus and Wolff's method.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure

    Emittance measurement study

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    Directional spectral emittance of black body cavitie

    Blowup of Jang's equation at outermost marginally trapped surfaces

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    The aim of this paper is to collect some facts about the blowup of Jang's equation. First, we discuss how to construct solutions that blow up at an outermost MOTS. Second, we exclude the possibility that there are extra blowup surfaces in data sets with non-positive mean curvature. Then we investigate the rate of convergence of the blowup to a cylinder near a strictly stable MOTS and show exponential convergence near a strictly stable MOTS.Comment: 15 pages. This revision corrects some typo

    Rethink fuel poverty as a complex problem

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    Maximum fidelity retransmission of mirror symmetric qubit states

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    In this paper we address the problem of optimal reconstruction of a quantum state from the result of a single measurement when the original quantum state is known to be a member of some specified set. A suitable figure of merit for this process is the fidelity, which is the probability that the state we construct on the basis of the measurement result is found by a subsequent test to match the original state. We consider the maximisation of the fidelity for a set of three mirror symmetric qubit states. In contrast to previous examples, we find that the strategy which minimises the probability of erroneously identifying the state does not generally maximise the fidelity
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