5,760 research outputs found
Splitting hairs of the three charge black hole
We construct the large radius limit of the metric of three charge supertubes
and three charge BPS black rings by using the fact that supertubes preserve the
same supersymmetries as their component branes. Our solutions reproduce a few
of the properties of three charge supertubes found recently using the Born
Infeld description. Moreover, we find that these solutions pass a number of
rather nontrivial tests which they should pass if they are to describe some of
the hair of three charge black holes and three charge black rings.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, v2 minor correction
Very high quality factor measured in annealed fused silica
We present the results of quality factor measurements for rod samples made of
fused silica. To decrease the dissipation we annealed our samples. The highest
quality factor that we observed was for a mode at
384 Hz. This is the highest published value of in fused silica measured to
date.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Tachyon Tube on non BPS D-branes
We report our searches for a single tubular tachyonic solution of regular
profile on unstable non BPS D3-branes. We first show that some extended
Dirac-Born-Infeld tachyon actions in which new contributions are added to avoid
the Derrick's no-go theorem still could not have a single regular tube
solution. Next we use the Minahan-Zwiebach tachyon action to find the regular
tube solutions with circular or elliptic cross section. With a critical
electric field, the energy of the tube comes entirely from the D0 and strings,
while the energy associated to the tubular D2-brane tension is vanishing. We
also show that fluctuation spectrum around the tube solution does not contain
tachyonic mode. The results are consistent with the identification of the
tubular configuration as a BPS D2-brane.Comment: Latex 18 page
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Development of an Antineutrino Detector to Monitor the Operation of a CANDU6 On-Load Refueled Reactor
Results from a Search for Light-Mass Dark Matter with a P-type Point Contact Germanium Detector
We report on several features present in the energy spectrum from an ultra
low-noise germanium detector operated at 2,100 m.w.e. By implementing a new
technique able to reject surface events, a number of cosmogenic peaks can be
observed for the first time. We discuss several possible causes for an
irreducible excess of bulk-like events below 3 keVee, including a dark matter
candidate common to the DAMA/LIBRA annual modulation effect, the hint of a
signal in CDMS, and phenomenological predictions. Improved constraints are
placed on a cosmological origin for the DAMA/LIBRA effect.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. v2: submitted version. Minimal changes in
wording, one reference adde
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First constraint on coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering in argon
Coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CEvNS) is calculated to be the dominant neutrino scattering channel for neutrinos of energy . We report a limit for this process from data collected in an engineering run of the 29Â kg CENNS-10 liquid argon detector located 27.5Â m from the pion decay-at-rest neutrino source at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) with protons on target. The dataset provided constraints on beam-related backgrounds critical for future measurements and yielded candidate CEvNS events which implies a cross section for the process, averaged over the SNS pion decay-at-rest flux, of , a limit within twice the Standard Model prediction. This is the first limit on CEvNS from an argon nucleus and confirms the earlier CsI[Na] nonstandard neutrino interaction constraints from the collaboration. This run demonstrated the feasibility of the ongoing experimental effort to detect CEvNS with liquid argon
Sex-dependent associations between addiction-related behaviors and the microbiome in outbred rats.
BackgroundMultiple factors contribute to the etiology of addiction, including genetics, sex, and a number of addiction-related behavioral traits. One behavioral trait where individuals assign incentive salience to food stimuli ("sign-trackers", ST) are more impulsive compared to those that do not ("goal-trackers", GT), as well as more sensitive to drugs and drug stimuli. Furthermore, this GT/ST phenotype predicts differences in other behavioral measures. Recent studies have implicated the gut microbiota as a key regulator of brain and behavior, and have shown that many microbiota-associated changes occur in a sex-dependent manner. However, few studies have examined how the microbiome might influence addiction-related behaviors. To this end, we sought to determine if gut microbiome composition was correlated with addiction-related behaviors determined by the GT/ST phenotype.MethodsOutbred male (N=101) and female (N=101) heterogeneous stock rats underwent a series of behavioral tests measuring impulsivity, attention, reward-learning, incentive salience, and locomotor response. Cecal microbiome composition was estimated using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Behavior and microbiome were characterized and correlated with behavioral phenotypes. Robust sex differences were observed in both behavior and microbiome; further analyses were conducted within sex using the pre-established goal/sign-tracking (GT/ST) phenotype and partial least squares differential analysis (PLS-DA) clustered behavioral phenotype.ResultsOverall microbiome composition was not associated to the GT/ST phenotype. However, microbial alpha diversity was significantly decreased in female STs. On the other hand, a measure of impulsivity had many significant correlations to microbiome in both males and females. Several measures of impulsivity were correlated with the genus Barnesiella in females. Female STs had notable correlations between microbiome and attentional deficient. In both males and females, many measures were correlated with the bacterial families Ruminocococcaceae and Lachnospiraceae.ConclusionsThese data demonstrate correlations between several addiction-related behaviors and the microbiome specific to sex
Observation of Coherent Elastic Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering
The coherent elastic scattering of neutrinos off nuclei has eluded detection
for four decades, even though its predicted cross-section is the largest by far
of all low-energy neutrino couplings. This mode of interaction provides new
opportunities to study neutrino properties, and leads to a miniaturization of
detector size, with potential technological applications. We observe this
process at a 6.7-sigma confidence level, using a low-background, 14.6-kg
CsI[Na] scintillator exposed to the neutrino emissions from the Spallation
Neutron Source (SNS) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Characteristic
signatures in energy and time, predicted by the Standard Model for this
process, are observed in high signal-to-background conditions. Improved
constraints on non-standard neutrino interactions with quarks are derived from
this initial dataset
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