12,215 research outputs found
Moduli Spaces for D-branes at the Tip of a Cone
For physicists: We show that the quiver gauge theory derived from a
Calabi-Yau cone via an exceptional collection of line bundles on the base has
the original cone as a component of its classical moduli space. For
mathematicians: We use data from the derived category of sheaves on a Fano
surface to construct a quiver, and show that its moduli space of
representations has a component which is isomorphic to the anticanonical cone
over the surface.Comment: 8 page
Structure of human transthyretin complexed with bromophenols: a new mode of binding
The binding of two organohalogen substances, pentabromophenol (PBP) and 2,4,6-tribromophenol (TBP), to human transthyretin (TTR), a thyroid hormone transport protein, has been studied by in vitro competitive binding assays and by X-ray crystallography. Both compounds bind to TTR with high affinity, in competition with the natural ligand thyroxine (
Comment on "Optical Response of Strongly Coupled Nanopraticles in Dimer Arrays" (Phys. Rev. B 71(4), 045404, 2005)
I have re-calculated the extinction spectra of aggregates of two silver
nanospheres shown in Figs.~2 and 3 of Ref.~8. I have used the approximate
method of images according to Ref.~8 and an exact numerical technique. I have
found that the three sets of data (those I have obtained by the method of
images, the numerical results, and the results published in Ref.~8) do not
coincide. In this Comment, I discuss the reasons for these discrepancies and
the general applicability of the method of images to the quasi-static
electromagnetic problem of two interacting nanospheres.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Winding effects on brane/anti-brane pairs
We study a brane/anti-brane configuration which is separated along a compact
direction by constructing a tachyon effective action which takes into account
transverse scalars. Such an action is relevant in the study of HQCD model of
Sakai and Sugimoto of chiral symmetry breaking, where the size of the compact
circle sets the confinement scale. Our approach is motivated by string theory
orbifold constructions and gives a route to model inhomogeneous tachyon decay.
We illustrate the techniques involved with a relatively simple example of a
harmonic oscillator on a circle. We will then repeat the analysis for the
Sakai-Sugimoto model and show that by integrating out the winding modes will
provide us with a renormalized action with a lower energy than that of
truncating to zero winding sector.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures. v3: discussion and references added, published
versio
Lectures on Non-BPS Dirichlet branes
A comprehensive introduction to the boundary state approach to Dirichlet
branes is given. Various examples of BPS and non-BPS Dirichlet branes are
discussed. In particular, the non-BPS states in the duality of Type IIA on K3
and the heterotic string on T4 are analysed in detail.Comment: 46 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX; lectures given at the TMR network school
on `Quantum aspects of gauge theories, supersymmetry and quantum gravity',
Torino, 26 January - 2 February 2000, and at the `Spring workshop on
Superstrings and related matters', Trieste, 27 March - 4 April 2000;
references adde
Generalized Paraxial Ray Trace Procedure Derived from Geodesic Deviation
Paraxial ray tracing procedures have become widely accepted techniques for
acoustic models in seismology and underwater acoustics. To date a generic form
of these procedures including fluid motion and time dependence has not appeared
in the literature. A detailed investigation of the characteristic curves of the
equations of hydrodynamics allows for an immediate generalization of the
procedure to be extracted from the equation form geodesic deviation. The
general paraxial ray trace equations serve as an ideal supplement to ordinary
ray tracing in predicting the deformation of acoustic beams in random
environments. The general procedure is derived in terms of affine
parameterization and in a coordinate time parameterization ideal for
application to physical acoustic ray propagation. The formalism is applied to
layered media, where the deviation equation reduces to a second order
differential equation for a single field with a general solution in terms of a
depth integral along the ray path. Some features are illustrated through
special cases which lead to exact solutions in terms of either ordinary or
special functions.Comment: Original; 40 pages (double spaced), 1 figure Replaced version; 36
pages single spaced, 7 figures. Expanded content; Complete derivation of the
equations from the equations of hydrodynamics, introduction of an auxiliary
basis for three dimensional wave-front modeling. Typos in text and equations
correcte
A Tuned and Scalable Fast Multipole Method as a Preeminent Algorithm for Exascale Systems
Among the algorithms that are likely to play a major role in future exascale
computing, the fast multipole method (FMM) appears as a rising star. Our
previous recent work showed scaling of an FMM on GPU clusters, with problem
sizes in the order of billions of unknowns. That work led to an extremely
parallel FMM, scaling to thousands of GPUs or tens of thousands of CPUs. This
paper reports on a a campaign of performance tuning and scalability studies
using multi-core CPUs, on the Kraken supercomputer. All kernels in the FMM were
parallelized using OpenMP, and a test using 10^7 particles randomly distributed
in a cube showed 78% efficiency on 8 threads. Tuning of the
particle-to-particle kernel using SIMD instructions resulted in 4x speed-up of
the overall algorithm on single-core tests with 10^3 - 10^7 particles. Parallel
scalability was studied in both strong and weak scaling. The strong scaling
test used 10^8 particles and resulted in 93% parallel efficiency on 2048
processes for the non-SIMD code and 54% for the SIMD-optimized code (which was
still 2x faster). The weak scaling test used 10^6 particles per process, and
resulted in 72% efficiency on 32,768 processes, with the largest calculation
taking about 40 seconds to evaluate more than 32 billion unknowns. This work
builds up evidence for our view that FMM is poised to play a leading role in
exascale computing, and we end the paper with a discussion of the features that
make it a particularly favorable algorithm for the emerging heterogeneous and
massively parallel architectural landscape
Algebraic Geometry Realization of Quantum Hall Soliton
Using Iqbal-Netzike-Vafa dictionary giving the correspondence between the
H homology of del Pezzo surfaces and p-branes, we develop a new way to
approach system of brane bounds in M-theory on . We first
review the structure of ten dimensional quantum Hall soliton (QHS) from the
view of M-theory on . Then, we show how the D0 dissolution in
D2-brane is realized in M-theory language and derive the p-brane constraint eqs
used to define appropriately QHS. Finally, we build an algebraic geometry
realization of the QHS in type IIA superstring and show how to get its type IIB
dual. Others aspects are also discussed.
Keywords: Branes Physics, Algebraic Geometry, Homology of Curves in Del Pezzo
surfaces, Quantum Hall Solitons.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figure
Engineering Electromagnetic Properties of Periodic Nanostructures Using Electrostatic Resonances
Electromagnetic properties of periodic two-dimensional sub-wavelength
structures consisting of closely-packed inclusions of materials with negative
dielectric permittivity in a dielectric host with positive
can be engineered using the concept of multiple electrostatic
resonances. Fully electromagnetic solutions of Maxwell's equations reveal
multiple wave propagation bands, with the wavelengths much longer than the
nanostructure period. It is shown that some of these bands are described using
the quasi-static theory of the effective dielectric permittivity
, and are independent of the nanostructure period. Those bands
exhibit multiple cutoffs and resonances which are found to be related to each
other through a duality condition. An additional propagation band characterized
by a negative magnetic permeability develops when a magnetic moment is induced
in a given nano-particle by its neighbors. Imaging with sub-wavelength
resolution in that band is demonstrated
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