13,248 research outputs found
Homological symbols and the Quillen conjecture
We formulate a "correct" version of the Quillen conjecture on linear group
homology for certain arithmetic rings and provide evidence for the new
conjecture. In this way we predict that the linear group homology has a direct
summand looking like an unstable form of Milnor K-theory and we call this new
theory "homological symbols algebra". As a byproduct we prove the Quillen
conjecture in homological degree two for the rank two and the prime 5
Open-cluster density profiles derived using a kernel estimator
Surface and spatial radial density profiles in open clusters are derived
using a kernel estimator method. Formulae are obtained for the contribution of
every star into the spatial density profile. The evaluation of spatial density
profiles is tested against open-cluster models from N-body experiments with N =
500. Surface density profiles are derived for seven open clusters (NGC 1502,
1960, 2287, 2516, 2682, 6819 and 6939) using Two-Micron All-Sky Survey data and
for different limiting magnitudes. The selection of an optimal kernel
half-width is discussed. It is shown that open-cluster radius estimates hardly
depend on the kernel half-width. Hints of stellar mass segregation and
structural features indicating cluster non-stationarity in the regular force
field are found. A comparison with other investigations shows that the data on
open-cluster sizes are often underestimated. The existence of an extended
corona around the open cluster NGC 6939 was confirmed. A combined function
composed of the King density profile for the cluster core and the uniform
sphere for the cluster corona is shown to be a better approximation of the
surface radial density profile.The King function alone does not reproduce
surface density profiles of sample clusters properly. The number of stars, the
cluster masses and the tidal radii in the Galactic gravitational field for the
sample clusters are estimated. It is shown that NGC 6819 and 6939 are extended
beyond their tidal surfaces.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figure
BPS domain walls in N=4 supergravity and dual flows
We establish the conditions for supersymmetric domain wall solutions to N=4
gauged supergravity in five dimensions. These read as BPS first-order equations
for the warp factor and the scalar fields, driven by a superpotential and
supplemented by a set of constraints that we specify in detail. Then we apply
our results to certain consistent truncations of IIB supergravity, thus
exploring their dual field theory renormalization group flows. We find a
universal flow deforming superconformal theories on D3-branes at Calabi-Yau
cones. Moreover, we obtain a superpotential for the solution corresponding to
the baryonic branch of the Klebanov-Strassler theory, as well as the
superpotential for the flow describing D3 and wrapped D5-branes on the resolved
conifold.Comment: 42 pages, 1 figure. v2: minor changes, matches published versio
Three-dimensional super Yang-Mills with unquenched flavor
We construct analytically the gravity duals of three-dimensional, super
Yang-Mills-type theories with supersymmetry coupled to
quark flavors. The backreaction of the quarks on the color degrees of freedom
is included, and corresponds on the gravity side to the backreaction of
D6-branes on the background of D2-branes. The D6-branes are smeared over
the compact part of the geometry, which must be a six-dimensional nearly
K\"ahler manifold in order to preserve supersymmetry. For massless quarks, the
solutions flow in the IR to an fixed point dual to a
Chern-Simons-matter theory. For light quarks the theories exhibit
quasi-conformal dynamics (walking) at energy scales , with the 't Hooft coupling.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure. v2 Minor editing, refs. added. Tallies with
published versio
Compressed Sensing Applied to Weather Radar
We propose an innovative meteorological radar, which uses reduced number of
spatiotemporal samples without compromising the accuracy of target information.
Our approach extends recent research on compressed sensing (CS) for radar
remote sensing of hard point scatterers to volumetric targets. The previously
published CS-based radar techniques are not applicable for sampling weather
since the precipitation echoes lack sparsity in both range-time and Doppler
domains. We propose an alternative approach by adopting the latest advances in
matrix completion algorithms to demonstrate the sparse sensing of weather
echoes. We use Iowa X-band Polarimetric (XPOL) radar data to test and
illustrate our algorithms.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figrue
Supersymmetric Lifshitz-like backgrounds from N=4 SYM with heavy quark density
We examine a class of gravity backgrounds obtained by considering the
backreaction of a spatially uniform density of mutually BPS Wilson lines or
heavy quarks in N=4 SUSY Yang-Mills theory. The configurations preserve eight
supercharges and an SO(5) subgroup of the SO(6) R-symmetry. They are obtained
by considering the 1/4-BPS geometries associated to smeared string/D3-brane
(F1-D3) intersections. We argue that for the (partially) localized
intersection, the geometry exhibits a flow from AdS_5 x S^5 in the UV to a
novel IR scaling solution displaying anisotropic Lifshitz-like scaling with
dynamical critical exponent z=7, hyperscaling violation and a logarithmic
running dilaton. We also obtain a two-parameter family of smeared 1/4-BPS
solutions on the Coulomb branch of N=4 SYM exhibiting Lifshitz scaling and
hyperscaling violation. For a certain parametric range these yield IR
geometries which are conformal to AdS_2 x R^3, and which have been argued to be
relevant for fermionic physics.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, references added, version published in JHEP,
Feb. 201
Calcium isotopic composition of high-latitude proxy carrier Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sin.)
The accurate reconstruction of sea surface temperature (SST) history in climate-sensitive regions (e.g. tropical and polar oceans) became a challenging task in palaeoceanographic research. Biogenic shell carbonate SST proxies successfully developed for tropical regions often fail in cool water environments. Their major regional shortcomings and the cryptic diversity now found within the major high latitude proxy carrier Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sin.) highlight an urgent need to explore complementary SST proxies for these cool-water regions. Here we incorporate the genetic component into a calibration study of a new SST proxy for the high latitudes. We found that the calcium isotopic composition (δ44/40Ca) of calcite from genotyped net catches and core-top samples of the planktonic foraminifera Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sin.) is related to temperature and unaffected by genetic variations. The temperature sensitivity has been found to be 0.17 (±0.02)‰ per 1°C, highlighting its potential for downcore applications in open marine cool-water environments. Our results further indicate that in extreme polar environments, below a critical threshold temperature of 2.0 (±0.5)°C associated with salinities below 33.0 (±0.5)‰, a prominent shift in biomineralization affects the δ44/40Ca of genotyped and core-top N. pachyderma (sin.), becoming insensitive to temperature. These findings highlight the need of more systematic calibration studies on single planktonic foraminiferal species in order to unravel species-specific factors influencing the temperature sensitivity of Ca isotope fractionation and to validate the proxies' applicability
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