748 research outputs found
Exactly soluble model for self-gravitating D-particles with the wormhole
We consider D-particles coupled to the CGHS dilaton gravity and obtain the
exact wormhole geometry and trajectories of D-particles by introducing the
exotic matter. The initial static wormhole background is not stable after
infalling D-particles due to the classical backreaction of the geometry so that
the additional exotic matter source should be introduced for the stability.
Then, the traversable wormhole geometry naturally appears and the D-particles
can travel through it safely. Finally, we discuss the dynamical evolution of
the wormhole throat and the massless limit of D-particles.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, revte
Wormhole phase in the RST model
We show that the RST model describing the exactly soluble black hole model
can have a dynamical wormhole solution along with an appropriate boundary
condition. The necessary exotic matter which is usually negative energy density
is remarkably produced by the quantization of the infalling matter fields. Then
the asymptotic geometry in the past is two-dimensional anti-de Sitter(AdS),
which implies the exotic matter is negative. As time goes on, the wormhole
eventually evolves into the black hole and its Hawking radiation appears. The
throat of the static RST wormhole is lower-bounded but in the presence of
infalling matter it collapses to a black hole.Comment: v1. REVTeX3, 12 pages and 1 figure; v2. JHEP3, 10 pages and 1 figure,
version published in JHE
The uncharacteristic occurrence of the June 2013 biomass-burning haze event in Southeast Asia: effects of the Madden-Julian oscillation and tropical cyclone activity.
One of the worst haze events to ever hit Peninsular Malaysia occurred in June 2013 due to smoke from Riau, Central Sumatra. While biomass-burning in the region is common, the early occurrence of a haze episode of this magnitude was uncharacteristic of the seasonality of extreme fire events, which usually occur between August and October in the Maritime Continent (MC). This study aims to investigate the phenomenology of the June 2013 haze event and its underlying meteorological forcing agents. The aerosol and meteorological environment during the event is examined using the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) active fire hotspot detections and aerosol optical thickness retrievals, satellite-based precipitation retrievals, and meteorological indices. These datasets are then supported by a WRF-Chem simulation to provide a comprehensive picture of the event's meteorology and aerosol transport phenomenology. While extreme fire events are more characteristic of El Nino years, the MODIS fire count over the MC in June for the years 2001–2015 was highest in 2013 when neutral El Nino/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) conditions prevailed. Although, the mean daily precipitation for June 2013 was below average for June 2003–2015. An early active tropical cyclone (TC) season occurred in 2013, and results show that the combined induced subsidence and flow enhancement due to TC Bebinca and the dry phases of a strong Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO) event contributed to the event intensification. Results also show that Bebinca induced a decrease in surface relative humidity of at least 10% over Riau, where fire hotspots were concentrated
The VLT LBG redshift survey – VI. Mapping H i in the proximity of z ∼ 3 LBGs with X-Shooter
We present an analysis of the spatial distribution and dynamics of neutral hydrogen gas around galaxies using new X-Shooter observations of z ∼ 2.5–4 quasars. Adding the X-Shooter data to our existing data set of high-resolution quasar spectroscopy, we use a total sample of 29 quasars alongside ∼1700 Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) in the redshift range 2 ≲ z ≲ 3.5. We measure the Lyα forest auto-correlation function, finding a clustering length of s0 = 0.081 ± 0.006 h−1 Mpc, and the cross-correlation function with LBGs, finding a cross-clustering length of s0 = 0.27 ± 0.14 h−1 Mpc and power-law slope γ = 1.1 ± 0.2. Our results highlight the weakly clustered nature of neutral hydrogren systems in the Lyα forest. Building on this, we make a first analysis of the dependence of the clustering on absorber strength, finding a clear preference for stronger Lyα forest absorption features to be more strongly clustered around the galaxy population, suggesting that they trace on average higher mass haloes. Using the projected and 2-D cross-correlation functions, we constrain the dynamics of Lyα forest clouds around z ∼ 3 galaxies. We find a significant detection of large-scale infall of neutral hydrogen, with a constraint on the Lyα forest infall parameter of βF = 1.02 ± 0.22
The Shapes of Dirichlet Defects
If the vacuum manifold of a field theory has the appropriate topological
structure, the theory admits topological structures analogous to the D-branes
of string theory, in which defects of one dimension terminate on other defects
of higher dimension. The shapes of such defects are analyzed numerically, with
special attention paid to the intersection regions. Walls (co-dimension 1
branes) terminating on other walls, global strings (co-dimension 2 branes) and
local strings (including gauge fields) terminating on walls are all considered.
Connections to supersymmetric field theories, string theory and condensed
matter systems are pointed out.Comment: 24 pages, RevTeX, 21 eps figure
Wormhole Geometries In Gravity
We study wormhole solutions in the framework of f (R,T) gravity where R is
the scalar curvature, and T is the trace of the stress-energy tensor of the
matter. We have obtained the shape function of the wormhole by specifying an
equation of state for the matter field and imposing the flaring out condition
at the throat. We show that in this modified gravity scenario, the matter
threading the wormhole may satisfy the energy conditions, so it is the
effective stress-energy that is responsible for violation of the null energy
condition.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, published version, references adde
The institutional shaping of management: in the tracks of English individualism
Globalisation raises important questions about the shaping of economic action by cultural factors. This article explores the formation of what is seen by some as a prime influence on the formation of British management: individualism. Drawing on a range of historical sources, it argues for a comparative approach. In this case, the primary comparison drawn is between England and Scotland. The contention is that there is a systemic approach to authority in Scotland that can be contrasted to a personal approach in England. An examination of the careers of a number of Scottish pioneers of management suggests the roots of this systemic approach in practices of church governance. Ultimately this systemic approach was to take a secondary role to the personal approach engendered by institutions like the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, but it found more success in the different institutional context of the USA. The complexities of dealing with historical evidence are stressed, as is the value of taking a comparative approach. In this case this indicates a need to take religious practice as seriously as religious belief as a source of transferable practice. The article suggests that management should not be seen as a simple response to economic imperatives, but as shaped by the social and cultural context from which it emerges
Effective Action for the Quark-Meson Model
The scale dependence of an effective average action for mesons and quarks is
described by a nonperturbative flow equation. The running couplings lead to
spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking. We argue that for strong Yukawa coupling
between quarks and mesons the low momentum physics is essentially determined by
infrared fixed points. This allows us to establish relations between various
parameters related to the meson potential. The results for and
\VEV{\olpsi\psi} are not very sensitive to the poorly known details of the
quark--meson effective action at scales where the mesonic bound states form.
For realistic constituent quark masses we find around 100\MeV.Comment: 56 pages (including 10 figures and 1 table), uses epsf.st
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