12,120 research outputs found
Embedding the Pentagon
The Pentagon Model is an explicit supersymmetric extension of the Standard
Model, which involves a new strongly-interacting SU(5) gauge theory at
TeV-scale energies. We show that the Pentagon can be embedded into an SU(5) x
SU(5) x SU(5) gauge group at the GUT scale. The doublet-triplet splitting
problem, and proton decay compatible with experimental bounds, can be
successfully addressed in this context. The simplest approach fails to provide
masses for the lighter two generations of quarks and leptons; however, this
problem can be solved by the addition of a pair of antisymmetric tensor fields
and an axion.Comment: 39 page
Effective Action and Measure in Matrix Model of IIB Superstrings
We calculate an effective action and measure induced by the integration over
the auxiliary field in the matrix model recently proposed to describe IIB
superstrings. It is shown that the measure of integration over the auxiliary
matrix is uniquely determined by locality and reparametrization invariance of
the resulting effective action. The large-- limit of the induced measure for
string coordinates is discussed in detail. It is found to be ultralocal and,
thus, possibly is irrelevant in the continuum limit. The model of the GKM type
is considered in relation to the effective action problem.Comment: 9pp., Latex; v2: the discussion of the large N limit of the induced
measure is substantially expande
Potential biomedical applications of ion beam technology
Electron bombardment ion thrusters used as ion sources have demonstrated a unique capability to vary the surface morphology of surgical implant materials. The microscopically rough surface texture produced by ion beam sputtering of these materials may result in improvements in the biological response and/or performance of implanted devices. Control of surface roughness may result in improved attachment of the implant to soft tissue, hard tissue, bone cement, or components deposited from blood. Potential biomedical applications of ion beam texturing discussed include: vascular prostheses, artificial heart pump diaphragms, pacemaker fixation, percutaneous connectors, orthopedic pros-thesis fixtion, and dental implants
The Number of States of Two Dimensional Critical String Theory
We discuss string theory vacua which have the wrong number of spacetime
dimensions, and give a crude argument that vacua with more than four large
dimensions are improbable. We then turn to two dimensional vacua, which naively
appear to violate Bekenstein's entropy principle. A classical analysis shows
that the naive perturbative counting of states is unjustified. All excited
states of the system have strong coupling singularities which prevent us from
concluding that they really exist. A speculative interpretation of the
classical solutions suggests only a finite number of states will be found in
regions bounded by a finite area. We also argue that the vacuum degeneracy of
two dimensional classical string theory is removed in quantum mechanics. The
system appears to be in a Kosterlitz-Thouless phase. This leads to the
conclusion that it is also improbable to have only two large spacetime
dimensions in string theory. However, we note that, unlike our argument for
high dimensions, our conclusions about the ground state have neglected two
dimensional quantum gravitational effects, and are at best incomplete.Comment: 12 pages, harvma
Natural PQ symmetry in the 3-3-1 model with a minimal scalar sector
In the framework of a 3-3-1 model with a minimal scalar sector we make a
detailed study concerning the implementation of the PQ symmetry in order to
solve the strong CP problem. For the original version of the model, with only
two scalar triplets, we show that the entire Lagrangian is invariant under a
PQ-like symmetry but no axion is produced since an U(1) subgroup remains
unbroken. Although in this case the strong CP problem can still be solved, the
solution is largely disfavored since three quark states are left massless to
all orders in perturbation theory. The addition of a third scalar triplet
removes the massless quark states but the resulting axion is visible. In order
to become realistic the model must be extended to account for massive quarks
and invisible axion. We show that the addition of a scalar singlet together
with a Z_N discrete gauge symmetry can successfully accomplish these tasks and
protect the axion field against quantum gravitational effects. To make sure
that the protecting discrete gauge symmetry is anomaly free we use a discrete
version of the Green-Schwarz mechanism.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure, 3 table
Is There A String Theory Landscape
We examine recent claims of a large set of flux compactification solutions of
string theory. We conclude that the arguments for AdS solutions are plausible.
The analysis of meta-stable dS solutions inevitably leads to situations where
long distance effective field theory breaks down. We then examine whether these
solutions are likely to lead to a description of the real world. We conclude
that one must invoke a strong version of the anthropic principle. We explain
why it is likely that this leads to a prediction of low energy supersymmetry
breaking, but that many features of anthropically selected flux
compactifications are likely to disagree with experiment.Comment: 39 pages, Latex, ``Terminology surrounding the anthropic principle
revised to conform with accepted usage. More history of the anthropic
principle included. Various references added.
Some comments about Schwarzschield black holes in Matrix theory
In the present paper we calculate the statistical partition function for any
number of extended objects in Matrix theory in the one loop approximation. As
an application, we calculate the statistical properties of K clusters of D0
branes and then the statistical properties of K membranes which are wound on a
torus.Comment: 15 page
Ten Dimensional Black Hole and the D0-brane Threshold Bound State
We discuss the ten dimensional black holes made of D0-branes in the regime
where the effective coupling is large, and yet the 11D geometry is unimportant.
We suggest that these black holes can be interpreted as excitations over the
threshold bound state. Thus, the entropy formula for the former is used to
predict a scaling region of the wave function of the latter. The horizon radius
and the mass gap predicted in this picture agree with the formulas derived from
the classical geometry.Comment: 11 pages, harvmac; v2: typos corrected, argument for the convergence
of two integrals improved, v3: one ref. adde
Comment about quasi-isotropic solution of Einstein equations near cosmological singularity
We generalize for the case of arbitrary hydrodynamical matter the
quasi-isotropic solution of Einstein equations near cosmological singularity,
found by Lifshitz and Khalatnikov in 1960 for the case of radiation-dominated
universe. It is shown that this solution always exists, but dependence of terms
in the quasi-isotropic expansion acquires a more complicated form.Comment: 7 pages, The collective of authors is enlarged and some comments and
references are adde
Out of equilibrium: understanding cosmological evolution to lower-entropy states
Despite the importance of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, it is not
absolute. Statistical mechanics implies that, given sufficient time, systems
near equilibrium will spontaneously fluctuate into lower-entropy states,
locally reversing the thermodynamic arrow of time. We study the time
development of such fluctuations, especially the very large fluctuations
relevant to cosmology. Under fairly general assumptions, the most likely
history of a fluctuation out of equilibrium is simply the CPT conjugate of the
most likely way a system relaxes back to equilibrium. We use this idea to
elucidate the spacetime structure of various fluctuations in (stable and
metastable) de Sitter space and thermal anti-de Sitter space.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figure
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