2,369 research outputs found
On Elliptical Billiards in the Lobachevsky Space and associated Geodesic Hierarchies
We derive Cayley's type conditions for periodical trajectories for the
billiard within an ellipsoid in the Lobachevsky space. It appears that these
new conditions are of the same form as those obtained before for the Euclidean
case. We explain this coincidence by using theory of geodesically equivalent
metrics and show that Lobachevsky and Euclidean elliptic billiards can be
naturally considered as a part of a hierarchy of integrable elliptical
billiards.Comment: 14 pages, to appear in Journal of Geometry and Physic
Inherited crustal deformation along the East Gondwana margin revealed by seismic anisotropy tomography
Acknowledgments We thank Mallory Young for providing phase velocity measurements in mainland Australia and Tasmania. Robert Musgrave is thanked for making available his tilt-filtered magnetic intensity map. In the short term, data may be made available by contacting the authors (S.P. or N.R.). A new database of passive seismic data recorded in Australia is planned as part of a national geophysics data facility for easy access download. Details on the status of this database may be obtained from the authors (S.P., N.R., or A.M.R.). There are no restrictions on access for noncommercial use. Commercial users should seek written permission from the authors (S.P. or N.R.). Ross Cayley publishes with the permission of the Director of the Geological Survey of Victoria.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A three-qubit interpretation of BPS and non-BPS STU black holes
Following the recent trend we develop further the black hole analogy between
quantum information theory and the theory of extremal stringy black hole
solutions. We show that the three-qubit interpretation of supersymmetric black
hole solutions in the STU model can be extended also to include
non-supersymmetric ones. First we show that the black hole potential can be
expressed as one half the norm of a suitably chosen three-qubit entangled state
containing the quantized charges and the moduli. The extremization of the black
hole potential in terms of this entangled state amounts to either supressing
bit flip errors (BPS-case) or allowing very special types of flips transforming
the states between different classes of non-BPS solutions. We are illustrating
our results for the example of the D2-D6 system. In this case the bit flip
errors are corresponding to sign flip errors of the charges originating from
the number of D2 branes. After moduli stabilization the states depending
entirely on the charges are maximally entangled graph states (of the triangle
graph) well-known from quantum information theory. An N=8 interpretation of the
STU-model in terms of a mixed state with fermionic purifications is also given.Comment: 35 page
Writer's block is not a struggle with your writing but with your thinking. Write your way out of it
Most graduate writers who are struggling with their writing are actually struggling with their thinking. It isn't a psychological block, but rather the intellectual confusions endemic to the process of communicating sophisticated research. To Rachael Cayley, these confusions are real and can have deleterious consequences for writing, but when we treat these problems as conceptual problems in our thinking we create the space to use writing as a strategy to solve them. The writerās block label may just be further alienating us from our own writing; write your way out
Equation of state of low--density neutron matter and the pairing gap
We report results of the equation of state of neutron matter in the
low--density regime, where the Fermi wave vector ranges from . Neutron matter in this regime is superfluid because of
the strong and attractive interaction in the channel. The properties of
this superfluid matter are calculated starting from a realistic Hamiltonian
that contains modern two-- and three--body interactions. The ground state
energy and the superfluid energy gap are calculated using the Auxiliary
Field Diffusion Monte Carlo method. We study the structure of the ground state
by looking at pair distribution functions as well as the Cooper-pair wave
function used in the calculations.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
A Generalized Enumeration of Labeled Trees and Reverse Pr\"ufer Algorithm
A {\em leader} of a tree on is a vertex which has no smaller
descendants in . Gessel and Seo showed \sum_{T \in
\mathcal{T}_n}u^\text{(# of leaders in $T$)} c^\text{(degree of 1 in $T$)}=u
P_{n-1}(1,u,cu), which is a generalization of Cayley formula, where
is the set of trees on and
Using a variation of Pr\"ufer
code which is called a {\em RP-code}, we give a simple bijective proof of
Gessel and Seo's formula.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Between Manuscript and Print: Literary Reception in Late Medieval France
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40647-015-0067-xBased on original archival and codicological research, this paper investigates the transformations and negotiations between manuscript and printed versions of fifteenth-century poetry through the specific example of one surprisingly complex debate poem, Le Songe de la Pucelle (The Dream of the Virgin). Our debate relates the choice that a female narrator must make between the respective appeals of two personifications, Love and Shame, who appear to her in a dream-vision. The manuscript tradition invariably collects the poem with other fifteenth-century debates and moral texts, while the early printed copies tended to have experienced a prior separate circulation and often remain as monotextual pamphlets. Manuscript and printed copies of the same poem seem, then, to target different audiences. My paper investigates this curious divergence in the transmission pattern of the manuscript and printed versions of the Songe and seeks possible answers in the very different sets of images accompanying the text in manuscript and printed versions
The Impact of Ben & Jerryās Corporate Social Advocacy on Corporate Reputation and Brand Loyalty
Companies are constantly sharing and posting content related to social issues. It is increasingly becoming an expectation for brands to take a stance on such controversies even where they may not be inherently related or relevant to the companyās daily activity. However, the extent to which this form of advocacy has residual effects on the advocating company is still unclear. This thesis aims to provide clarity on this matter by examining its impact on consumersā relationship with the company and related perceptions.
An online survey was conducted in March 2020. Findings were compared with social analytic research. A correlation analysis suggested a connection between post volume referencing the advocated issue and consumer perception of the company being associated with that issue. Analysis of survey results indicated that perceived fit between organizational identity and advocated issue impacts issue-specific corporate reputation. Findings also suggest perceived fit and perceived authenticity are highly correlated. Perceived fit between organizational identity and advocated social issue are also found to have positive effects on issue-specific reputation. Brand loyalty was similarly predicted by perceived fit and perceived authenticity of corporate social advocacy.
Practical and theoretical implications for research are discussed
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