155,006 research outputs found
Boundary States and Black Hole Entropy
Black hole entropy is derived from a sum over boundary states. The boundary
states are labeled by energy and momentum surface densities, and parametrized
by the boundary metric. The sum over state labels is expressed as a functional
integral with measure determined by the density of states. The sum over metrics
is expressed as a functional integral with measure determined by the universal
expression for the inverse temperature gradient at the horizon. The analysis
applies to any stationary, nonextreme black hole in any theory of gravitational
and matter fields.Comment: 4 pages, Revte
A laser Doppler velocimeter approach for near-wall three-dimensional turbulence measurements
A near-wall laser Doppler velocimeter approach is described that relies on a beam-turning probe which makes possible the direct measurement of the crossflow velocity at a grazing incident and the placement of optical components close to the flow region of interest regardless of test facility size. Other important elements of the approach are the use of digital frequency processing, an optically smooth measurement surface, and observation of the sensing volume at 90 degrees. The combination was found to dramatically reduce noise-in-signal effects caused by surface light scattering. Turbulent boundary-layer data to within 20 microns (y(sup+) approximately equal to 1) of the surface are presented which illustrate the potential of the approach
ERTS-1 Role in land management and planning in Minnesota
Research on applications of ERTS-1 imagery to land use has focused on evaluating the ability of ERTS-1 imagery to update and refine the detail of land use information in the Minnesota Land Management Information System. Work has been directed toward defining the capabilities of the ERTS-1 system to provide information about surface cover by identifying forest, water, and wetland resources; urban and agricultural development: and testing and evaluating data input and output procedures. As capabilities were developed, meetings were held with administrators and resource information users from various agencies of government to identify their information needs. A full scale systems test for several selected pilot areas in the state is nearly complete. Users have been identified for each test area and they have been instrumental in identifying data requirements and analysis needs for administrative purposes. Users have both rural and urban orientations and provide a basis for evaluation of the results
Putting an Edge to the Poisson Bracket
We consider a general formalism for treating a Hamiltonian (canonical) field
theory with a spatial boundary. In this formalism essentially all functionals
are differentiable from the very beginning and hence no improvement terms are
needed. We introduce a new Poisson bracket which differs from the usual
``bulk'' Poisson bracket with a boundary term and show that the Jacobi identity
is satisfied. The result is geometrized on an abstract world volume manifold.
The method is suitable for studying systems with a spatial edge like the ones
often considered in Chern-Simons theory and General Relativity. Finally, we
discuss how the boundary terms may be related to the time ordering when
quantizing.Comment: 36 pages, LaTeX. v2: A manifest formulation of the Poisson bracket
and some examples are added, corrected a claim in Appendix C, added an
Appendix F and a reference. v3: Some comments and references adde
Exploring Lifetime Effects in Femtoscopy
We investigate the role of lifetime effects from resonances and emission
duration tails in femtoscopy at RHIC in two Blast-Wave models. We find the
non-Gaussian components compare well with published source imaged data, but the
value of R_out obtained from Gaussian fits is not insensitive to the
non-Gaussian contributions when realistic acceptance cuts are applied to
models.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Black Hole Entropy from Conformal Field Theory in Any Dimension
Restricted to a black hole horizon, the ``gauge'' algebra of surface
deformations in general relativity contains a Virasoro subalgebra with a
calculable central charge. The fields in any quantum theory of gravity must
transform accordingly, i.e., they must admit a conformal field theory
description. Applying Cardy's formula for the asymptotic density of states, I
use this result to derive the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy. This method is
universal---it holds for any black hole, and requires no details of quantum
gravity---but it is also explicitly statistical mechanical, based on counting
microscopic states.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, no figures. Slightly shortened and polished for
journal; no significant changes in substanc
Motion and Trajectories of Particles Around Three-Dimensional Black Holes
The motion of relativistic particles around three dimensional black holes
following the Hamilton-Jacobi formalism is studied. It follows that the
Hamilton-Jacobi equation can be separated and reduced to quadratures in analogy
with the four dimensional case. It is shown that: a) particles are trapped by
the black hole independently of their energy and angular momentum, b) matter
alway falls to the centre of the black hole and cannot understake a motion with
stables orbits as in four dimensions. For the extreme values of the angular
momentum of the black hole, we were able to find exact solutions of the
equations of motion and trajectories of a test particle.Comment: Plain TeX, 9pp, IPNO-TH 93/06, DFTUZ 93/0
Action Principle for the Generalized Harmonic Formulation of General Relativity
An action principle for the generalized harmonic formulation of general
relativity is presented. The action is a functional of the spacetime metric and
the gauge source vector. An action principle for the Z4 formulation of general
relativity has been proposed recently by Bona, Bona--Casas and Palenzuela
(BBP). The relationship between the generalized harmonic action and the BBP
action is discussed in detail.Comment: This version is contains more thorough presentations and discussions
of the key results. To be published in PRD. (8 pages, no figures
Money and happiness : rank of income, not income, affects life satisfaction
Does money buy happiness, or does happiness come indirectly from the higher rank in society that money brings? Here we test a rank hypothesis, according to which people gain utility from the ranked position of their income within a comparison group. The rank hypothesis contrasts with traditional reference income hypotheses, which suggest utility from income depends on comparison to a social group reference norm. We find that the ranked position of an individual’s income predicts general life satisfaction, while absolute income and reference income have no effect. Furthermore, individuals weight upward comparisons more than downward comparisons. According to the rank hypothesis, income and utility are not directly linked: Increasing an individual’s income will only increase their utility if ranked position also increases and will necessarily reduce the utility of others who will lose rank
Molecular Identification of Eimeria Species in Broiler Chickens in Trinidad, West Indies
Coccidiosis is an intestinal disease of chickens of major economic importance to broiler industries worldwide. Species of coccidia found in chickens include Eimeria acervulina, Eimeria brunetti, Eimeria maxima, Eimeria mitis, Eimeria necatrix, Eimeria praecox, and Eimeria tenella. In recent years, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has been developed to provide accurate and rapid identification of the seven known Eimeria species of chickens. The aim of this study was to use species-specific real-time PCR (qPCR) to identify which of the seven Eimeria species are present in Trinidad poultry. Seventeen pooled fecal samples were collected from 6 broiler farms (2–5 pens per farm) across Trinidad. Feces were also collected from birds showing clinical signs of coccidiosis in two live bird markets (pluck shops). qPCR revealed the presence of five species of Eimeria (E. acervulina, E. maxima, E. mitis, E. necatrix, and E. tenella), but not E. brunetti or E. praecox. Mixed infections were detected on all broiler farms, and DNA of two highly pathogenic Eimeria species (E. tenella and E. necatrix) was detected in feces taken from clinically sick birds sampled from the two pluck shops
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