7,939 research outputs found
Quantum Field Theory on Spacetimes with a Compactly Generated Cauchy Horizon
We prove two theorems which concern difficulties in the formulation of the
quantum theory of a linear scalar field on a spacetime, (M,g_{ab}), with a
compactly generated Cauchy horizon. These theorems demonstrate the breakdown of
the theory at certain `base points' of the Cauchy horizon, which are defined as
`past terminal accumulation points' of the horizon generators. Thus, the
theorems may be interpreted as giving support to Hawking's `Chronology
Protection Conjecture', according to which the laws of physics prevent one from
manufacturing a `time machine'. Specifically, we prove: Theorem 1: There is no
extension to (M,g_{ab}) of the usual field algebra on the initial globally
hyperbolic region which satisfies the condition of F-locality at any base
point. In other words, any extension of the field algebra must, in any globally
hyperbolic neighbourhood of any base point, differ from the algebra one would
define on that neighbourhood according to the rules for globally hyperbolic
spacetimes. Theorem 2: The two-point distribution for any Hadamard state
defined on the initial globally hyperbolic region must (when extended to a
distributional bisolution of the covariant Klein-Gordon equation on the full
spacetime) be singular at every base point x in the sense that the difference
between this two point distribution and a local Hadamard distribution cannot be
given by a bounded function in any neighbourhood (in MXM) of (x,x). Theorem 2
implies quantities such as the renormalized expectation value of \phi^2 or of
the stress-energy tensor are necessarily ill-defined or singular at any base
point. The proofs rely on the `Propagation of Singularities' theorems of
Duistermaat and H\"ormander.Comment: 37 pages, LaTeX, uses latexsym and amsbsy, no figures; updated
version now published in Commun. Math. Phys.; no major revisions from
original versio
Update on the hadron spectrum with two flavors of staggered quarks
We present an update on the MILC Collaboration's light hadron spectrum
calculation with two flavors of dynamical, staggered quarks. We present
extrapolations of the nucleon to rho mass ratio to the continuum limit for
fixed values of the pi to rho mass ratio including the physical one.Comment: 3 pages, LaTex with espcrc2 and epsf, 5 postscript figures included,
Lattice '97 Proceeding
Codes of Conduct
A major accomplishment of the Tokyo round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations, which was concluded in 1979, was the negotiation of eleven stand-alone general treaty agreements. Nine of these agreements dealt wholly or in part with nontariff measures and two with tariffs. There were six nontariff barrier (NTB) specific agreements: these related to antidumping, subsidies, standards, government procurement, customs valuation, and import licensing procedures. Three additional nontariff agreements were sector specific and related to civil aircraft, dairy products, and bovine meat. In this paper, the word "codes" will refer to the six NTB specific agreements mentioned together with the civil aircraft agreement.Research Seminar in International Economics, Department of Economics, University of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101001/1/ECON441.pd
Lattice results for the decay constant of heavy-light vector mesons
We compute the leptonic decay constants of heavy-light vector mesons in the
quenched approximation. The reliability of lattice computations for heavy
quarks is checked by comparing the ratio of vector to pseudoscalar decay
constant with the prediction of Heavy Quark Effective Theory in the limit of
infinitely heavy quark mass. Good agreement is found. We then calculate the
decay constant ratio for B mesons: .
We also quote quenched MeV.Comment: 11 pages, 3 postscript figs., revtex; two references adde
Recommended from our members
A high-throughput screen identifies that CDK7 activates glucose consumption in lung cancer cells.
Elevated glucose consumption is fundamental to cancer, but selectively targeting this pathway is challenging. We develop a high-throughput assay for measuring glucose consumption and use it to screen non-small-cell lung cancer cell lines against bioactive small molecules. We identify Milciclib that blocks glucose consumption in H460 and H1975, but not in HCC827 or A549 cells, by decreasing SLC2A1 (GLUT1) mRNA and protein levels and by inhibiting glucose transport. Milciclib blocks glucose consumption by targeting cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7) similar to other CDK7 inhibitors including THZ1 and LDC4297. Enhanced PIK3CA signaling leads to CDK7 phosphorylation, which promotes RNA Polymerase II phosphorylation and transcription. Milciclib, THZ1, and LDC4297 lead to a reduction in RNA Polymerase II phosphorylation on the SLC2A1 promoter. These data indicate that our high-throughput assay can identify compounds that regulate glucose consumption and that CDK7 is a key regulator of glucose consumption in cells with an activated PI3K pathway
Detecting bias in meta-analyses of distance education research: big pictures we can rely on
© 2014, © 2014 Open and Distance Learning Association of Australia, Inc. This article has two interrelated purposes. The first is to explain how various forms of bias, if introduced during any stage of a meta-analysis, can provide the consumer with a misimpression of the state of a research literature. Five of the most important bias-producing aspects of a meta-analysis are presented and discussed. Second, armed with this information, we examine 15 meta-analyses of the literatures of distance education (DE), online learning (OL), and blended learning (BL), conducted from 2000 to 2014, with the intention of assessing potential sources of bias in each. All of these meta-analyses address the question: “How do students taking courses through DE, OL, and BL compare to students engaged in pure classroom instruction in terms of learning achievement outcomes?” We argue that questions asked by primary researchers must change to reflect issues that will drive improvements in designing and implementing DE, OL, and BL courses
The QCD spectrum with three quark flavors
We present results from a lattice hadron spectrum calculation using three
flavors of dynamical quarks - two light and one strange, and quenched
simulations for comparison. These simulations were done using a one-loop
Symanzik improved gauge action and an improved Kogut-Susskind quark action. The
lattice spacings, and hence also the physical volumes, were tuned to be the
same in all the runs to better expose differences due to flavor number. Lattice
spacings were tuned using the static quark potential, so as a byproduct we
obtain updated results for the effect of sea quarks on the static quark
potential. We find indications that the full QCD meson spectrum is in better
agreement with experiment than the quenched spectrum. For the 0++ (a0) meson we
see a coupling to two pseudoscalar mesons, or a meson decay on the lattice.Comment: 38 pages, 20 figures, uses epsf. 5/29/01 revision responds to
referee's Comments, changes pion fits and tables, and corrects Fig. 10 and
some minor error
An exploration of bias in meta-analysis: the case of technology integration research in higher education
© 2014, Springer Science+Business Media New York. This article contains a second-order meta-analysis and an exploration of bias in the technology integration literature in higher education. Thirteen meta-analyses, dated from 2000 to 2014 were selected to be included based on the questions asked and the presence of adequate statistical information to conduct a quantitative synthesis. The weighted random effects average was g++ = 0.393, p \u3c .000. The article goes on to report an assessment of the methodological quality of the thirteen studies based on Cooper’s (Research synthesis and meta-analysis: a step-by-step approach. Sage, Thousand Oaks, 2010) seven stages in the development of a meta-analysis. Two meta-analyses were found to have five out of seven stages where methodological flaws could potentially create biased results. Five meta-analyses contained two flawed stages and one contained one flawed stage. Four of the stages where methodological flaws can create bias are described in detail. The final section attempts to determine how much influence the methodological flaws exerted on the results of the second-order meta-analysis
- …