6,977 research outputs found
Toroidal Spiral Nambu-Goto Strings around Higher-Dimensional Black Holes
We present solutions of the Nambu-Goto equation for test strings in a shape
of toroidal spiral in five-dimensional spacetimes. In particular, we show that
stationary toroidal spirals exist around the five-dimensional Myers-Perry black
holes. We also show the existence of innermost stationary toroidal spirals
around the five-dimensional black holes like geodesic particles orbiting around
four-dimensional black holes.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Stationary Closed Strings in Five-dimensional Flat Spacetime
We investigate stationary rotating closed Nambu-Goto strings in
five-dimensional flat spacetime. The stationary string is defined as a
worldsheet that is tangent to a timelike Killing vector. Nambu-Goto equation of
motion for the stationary string is reduces to the geodesic equation on the
orbit space of the isometry group action generated by the Killing vector. We
take a linear combination of a time-translation vector and space-rotation
vectors as the Killing vector, and explicitly construct general solutions of
stationary rotating closed strings in five-dimensional flat spacetime. We show
a variety of their configurations and properties.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figure
Coordination of flagella on filamentous cells of Escherichia coli
Video techniques were used to study the coordination of different flagella on single filamentous cells of Escherichia coli. Filamentous, nonseptate cells were produced by introducing a cell division mutation into a strain that was polyhook but otherwise wild type for chemotaxis. Markers for its flagellar motors (ordinary polyhook cells that had been fixed with glutaraldehyde) were attached with antihook antibodies. The markers were driven alternately clockwise and counterclockwise, at angular velocities comparable to those observed when wild-type cells are tethered to glass. The directions of rotation of different markers on the same cell were not correlated; reversals of the flagellar motors occurred asynchronously. The bias of the motors (the fraction of time spent spinning counterclockwise) changed with time. Variations in bias were correlated, provided that the motors were within a few micrometers of one another. Thus, although the directions of rotation of flagellar motors are not controlled by a common intracellular signal, their biases are. This signal appears to have a limited range
Topology Change of Coalescing Black Holes on Eguchi-Hanson Space
We construct multi-black hole solutions in the five-dimensional
Einstein-Maxwell theory with a positive cosmological constant on the
Eguchi-Hanson space, which is an asymptotically locally Euclidean space. The
solutions describe the physical process such that two black holes with the
topology of S^3 coalesce into a single black hole with the topology of the lens
space L(2;1)=S^3/Z_2. We discuss how the area of the single black hole after
the coalescence depends on the topology of the horizon.Comment: 10 pages, Some comments are added. to be published as a letter in
Classical and Quantum Gravit
The frequency and validity of self-reported diagnosis of Parkinson's Disease in the UK elderly: MRC CFAS cohort
Background: Estimates of the incidence and prevalence of chronic diseases can be made using established cohort studies but these estimates may have lower reliability if based purely on self-reported diagnosis.Methods: The MRC Cognitive Function & Ageing Study ( MRC CFAS) has collected longitudinal data from a population-based random sample of 13004 individuals over the age of 65 years from 5 centres within the UK. Participants were asked at baseline and after a two-year follow-up whether they had received a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. Our aim was to make estimates of the incidence and prevalence of PD using self-reporting, and then investigate the validity of self-reported diagnosis using other data sources where available, namely death certification and neuropathological examination.Results: The self-reported prevalence of Parkinson's disease ( PD) amongst these individuals increases with age from 0.7% (95% CI 0.5 - 0.9) for 65 - 75, 1.4% ( 95% CI 1.0 - 1.7) for 75 - 85, and 1.6% ( 95% CI 1.0 - 2.3) for 85+ age groups respectively. The overall incidence of self reported PD in this cohort was 200/100,000 per year ( 95% CI 144 - 278). Only 40% of the deceased individuals reporting prevalent PD and 35% of those reporting incident PD had diagnoses of PD recorded on their death certificates. Neuropathological examination of individuals reporting PD also showed typical PD changes in only 40%, with the remainder showing basal ganglia pathologies causing parkinsonism rather than true PD pathology.Conclusion: Self-reporting of PD status may be used as a screening tool to identify patients for epidemiological study, but inevitably identifies a heterogeneous group of movement disorders patients. Within this group, age, male sex, a family history of PD and reduced cigarette smoking appear to act as independent risk factors for self-reported PD
Magnetic Ordering, Orbital Ordering and Resonant X-ray Scattering in Perovskite Titanates
The effective Hamiltonian for perovskite titanates is derived by taking into
account the three-fold degeneracy of orbitals and the strong
electron-electron interactions. The magnetic and orbital ordered phases are
studied in the mean-field approximation applied to the effective Hamiltonian. A
large degeneracy of the orbital states in the ferromagnetic phase is found in
contrast to the case of the doubly degenerate orbitals. Lifting of this
orbital degeneracy due to lattice distortions and spin-orbit coupling is
examined. A general form for the scattering cross section of the resonant x-ray
scattering is derived and is applied to the recent experimental results in
YTiO. The spin wave dispersion relation in the orbital ordered YTiO is
also studied.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Drastic effects of damping mechanisms on the third-order optical nonlinearity
We have investigated the optical response of superradiant atoms, which
undergoes three different damping mechanisms: radiative dissipation
(), dephasing (), and nonradiative dissipation
(). Whereas the roles of and are equivalent in
the linear susceptibility, the third-order nonlinear susceptibility drastically
depends on the ratio of and : When , the third-order susceptibility is essentially that of a single atom.
Contrarily, in the opposite case of , the third-order
susceptibility suffers the size-enhancement effect and becomes proportional to
the system size.Comment: 5pages, 2figure
Kaluza-Klein Multi-Black Holes in Five-Dimensional Einstein-Maxwell Theory
We construct the Kaluza-Klein multi-black hole solutions on the
Gibbons-Hawking multi-instanton space in the five-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell
theory. We study geometric properties of the multi-black hole solutions. In
particular, unlike the Gibbons-Hawking multi-instanton solutions, each
nut-charge is able to take a different value due to the existence of black hole
on it. The spatial cross section of each horizon can be admitted to have the
topology of a different lens space L(n;1)=S^3/Z_n addition to S^3.Comment: 8 pages, to be published in Classical and Quantum Gravit
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