516 research outputs found

    Spectral flow as a map between N=(2,0)-models

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    The space of (2,0)(2,0) models is of particular interest among all heterotic-string models because it includes the models with the minimal SO(10)SO(10) unification structure, which is well motivated by the Standard Model of particle physics data. The fermionic Z2×Z2\mathbb{Z}_2\times \mathbb{Z}_2 heterotic-string models revealed the existence of a new symmetry in the space of string configurations under the exchange of spinors and vectors of the SO(10)SO(10) GUT group, dubbed spinor-vector duality. Such symmetries are important for the understanding of the landscape of string vacua and ultimately for the possible operation of a dynamical vacuum selection mechanism in string theory. In this paper we generalize this idea to arbitrary internal rational Conformal Field Theories (RCFTs). We explain how the spectral flow operator normally acting within a general (2,2)(2,2) theory can be used as a map between (2,0)(2,0) models. We describe the details, give an example and propose more simple currents that can be used in a similar way.Comment: 14 pages, v2: minor changes, added one referenc

    Deep Supported Excavation in Difficult Ground Conditions in the City of Patras, Greece — Measured vs. Predicted Behavior

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    The technical characteristics of a deep supported excavation project using anchored diaphragm walls and the measured (by inclinometers) behavior of the soil retaining system are presented. The measured behavior is then compared with the predicted behavior using a finite element model of the excavation. The comparison shows a good agreement in a location where the soil profile is well defined. However, differences in the magnitude of the displacements were observed when the information on the soil profile was incomplete due to the variability of the deposits on site

    Creep Effects on Low-Amplitude Modulus of Clays

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    The investigation considered effects of on-going or previous drained creep on the low amplitude dynamic shear modulus of normally consolidated artificial and natural clay soils. Resonant column tests using the Hardin and Hall devices determined the low-amplitude shear modulus. Results indicated that the strain-rate of on-going creep determined the kind of effect on shear modulus. High strain-rates produced reduced values whereas low strain-rates slightly increased values of modulus, compared to the no-creep values. Previous creep produced higher values of modulus, when the clay was tested under after-creep isotropic confinement. The rate of secondary increase of shear modulus was not affected by the drained creep action. The behaviors of the remolded kaolinite clay and the undisturbed natural clay were remarkably similar

    Topography Effects in the Athens 1999 Earthquake: The Case of Hotel Dekelia

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    The effects of surface topography on the seismic ground response of the site of Hotel DEKELIA, which partially collapsed in the Athens 1999 earthquake, is studied by the finite element method. The hotel site is located at the crest of a 40m high bank of a stream crossing the area. 2-D and I-D analyses of seismic ground response were conducted using five accelerograms recorded in past earthquakes (including the Athens 1999 earthquake) as input motion. Geotechnical data for the site were obtained from the results of a geotechnical investigation conducted at the hotel site whereas a VSO vs. depth profile was estimated by using the SASW method. The ground response analyses were conducted by assuming both equivalent-linear and truly non-linear soil behavior. The results indicate that surface topography has the potential of amplifying the peak horizontal accelerations and the maximum spectral accelerations (for period values ranging from 0.35sec to 0.50 sec) at the hotel site by up to 35% and loo%, respectively. It was also found that the local soil conditions at the site may have amplified significantly the input motion. It is concluded that the combined effects of surface topography and local soil conditions may have contributed to the partial collapse of the hotel

    Response of the chiral soliton lattice to spin polarized currents

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    Spin polarized currents originate a spin-transfer torque that enables the manipulation of magnetic textures. Here we theoretically study the effect of a spin-polarized current on the magnetic texture corresponding to a chiral soliton lattice in a monoaxial helimagnet under a transverse magnetic field. At sufficiently small current density the chiral soliton lattice reaches a steady motion state with a velocity proportional to the intensity of the applied current, the mobility being independent of the density of solitons and the magnetic field. This motion is accompanied with a small conical distortion of the chiral soliton lattice. At large current density the spin-transfer torque destabilizes the chiral soliton lattice, driving the system to a ferromagnetic state parallel to the magnetic field. We analyze how the deformation of the chiral soliton lattice depends on the applied current density. The destruction of the chiral soliton lattice under current could serve as a possible erasure mechanisms for spintronic applications.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure

    Nonlinear porous medium flow with fractional potential pressure

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    We study a porous medium equation, with nonlocal diffusion effects given by an inverse fractional Laplacian operator. We pose the problem in n-dimensional space for all t>0 with bounded and compactly supported initial data, and prove existence of a weak and bounded solution that propagates with finite speed, a property that is nor shared by other fractional diffusion models.Comment: 32 pages, Late

    Two languages, two minds: flexible cognitive processing driven by language of operation.

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    People make sense of objects and events around them by classifying them into identifiable categories. The extent to which language affects this process has been the focus of a long-standing debate: Do different languages cause their speakers to behave differently? Here, we show that fluent German-English bilinguals categorize motion events according to the grammatical constraints of the language in which they operate. First, as predicted from cross-linguistic differences in motion encoding, bilingual participants functioning in a German testing context prefer to match events on the basis of motion completion to a greater extent than do bilingual participants in an English context. Second, when bilingual participants experience verbal interference in English, their categorization behavior is congruent with that predicted for German; when bilingual participants experience verbal interference in German, their categorization becomes congruent with that predicted for English. These findings show that language effects on cognition are context-bound and transient, revealing unprecedented levels of malleability in human cognition
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