1,521 research outputs found

    New hairy black holes with negative cosmological constant

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    Black hole solutions with nonspherical event horizon topology are shown to exist in an Einstein-Yang-Mills theory with negative cosmological constant. The main characteristics of the solutions are presented and differences with respect to the spherically symmetric case are studied. The stability of these configurations is also addressed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 Encapsulated PostScript figures, references adde

    Polarimetric dimension and nonregularity of tightly focused light beams

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    Polarimetric dimension and nonregularity are newly introduced concepts that characterize three-dimensional (3D) polarization states of light. We analyze the spectral polarimetric dimension and the degree of nonregularity associated with two kinds of tightly focused beams: A radially fully polarized Gaussian Schell-model (GSM) beam and a partially polarized beam composed of an incoherent superposition of two orthogonally polarized (coherent) plane-wave modes. We show that for both beams the focal field can exhibit genuine 3D and nonregular character, with even perfect nonregularity encountered for the tightly focused two-mode beam. These features originate from the partial spatial coherence and partial polarization of the incident beams, and in the limit of full coherence and polarization the three-dimensionality and nonregularity of the focal field vanish. We also find that the GSM beam can generate a nanoscale region around the focus where the field is essentially 3D unpolarized. The results demonstrate the rich polarimetric structure of focal fields and may find uses in optical particle manipulation and sensing

    Hawking Radiation of Black Holes in Infrared Modified Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz Gravity

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    We study the Hawking radiation of the spherically symmetric, asymptotically flat black holes in the infrared modified Horava-Lifshitz gravity by applying the methods of covariant anomaly cancellation and effective action, as well as the approach of Damour-Ruffini-Sannan's. These black holes behave as the usual Schwarzschild ones of the general relativity when the radial distance is very large. We also extend the method of covariant anomaly cancellation to derive the Hawking temperature of the spherically symmetric, asymptotically AdS black holes that represent the analogues of the Schwarzschild AdS ones.Comment: no figures, 16 pages,accepted by EPJ

    Extremal black holes in the Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity

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    We study the near-horizon geometry of extremal black holes in the z=3z=3 Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity with a flow parameter λ\lambda. For λ>1/2\lambda>1/2, near-horizon geometry of extremal black holes are AdS2×S2_2 \times S^2 with different radii, depending on the (modified) Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity. For 1/3≤λ≤1/21/3\le \lambda \le 1/2, the radius v2v_2 of S2S^2 is negative, which means that the near-horizon geometry is ill-defined and the corresponding Bekenstein-Hawking entropy is zero. We show explicitly that the entropy function approach does not work for obtaining the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of extremal black holes.Comment: 18 pages, v2:some points on Lifshitz black holes claified, v3: version to appear in EJP

    Parametric and non-parametric estimation of extreme earthquake event: the joint tail inference for mainshocks and aftershocks

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    In an earthquake event, the combination of a strong mainshock and damaging aftershocks is often the cause of severe structural damages and/or high death tolls. The objective of this paper is to provide estimation for the probability of such extreme events where the mainshock and the largest aftershocks exceed certain thresholds. Two approaches are illustrated and compared – a parametric approach based on previously observed stochastic laws in earthquake data, and a non-parametric approach based on bivariate extreme value theory. We analyze the earthquake data from the North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ) in Turkey during 1965–2018 and show that the two approaches provide unifying results

    Effects of non-digestible oligosaccharides on inflammation, lung health and performance of calves

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    Our objective was to determine the effects of nondigestible oligosaccharides (NDO) on lung health and performance. Three hundred male Holstein-Friesian calves aged 18.0 ± 3.6 d received 1 of 6 treatments for 8.5 wk (period 1). Treatments included a negative control (CON), galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS) administered as a spray via the nose once daily (SPR), GOS administered via the milk replacer (MR) at 1% (GOS-L) and 2% (GOS-H), fructo-oligosaccharides administered via the MR at 0.25% (FOS) and a combination of GOS and fructo-oligosaccharides administered via the MR at 1% and 0.25%, respectively (GOS-FOS). Milk replacer was fed twice daily. Feeding levels were equal between calves and increased progressively in time. Body weight was measured every 4 wk and clinical health was scored weekly. Blood and broncho-alveolar lavage fluid (BALF) samples were collected bi-weekly from a subset of calves (n = 120). After period 1, all calves received the same control MR for 18 wk until slaughter (period 2), during which general performance and clinical health were measured. Generally, infection pressure was high, with clinical scores and BALF proinflammatory TNFα concentrations increasing with time in period 1, which resulted in a high number of required group antimicrobial treatments (6 group antimicrobial treatments in 13 wk, supplied to all calves). Average daily gain adjusted to equal solid feed intake was increased for GOS-L (+61 g/d) compared with CON calves from experimental wk 1 to 5. Plasma white blood cell concentration tended to be lowered by GOS-L, plasma IL-8 concentration was reduced by all orally supplemented NDO, plasma IL-6 was reduced by all NDO treatments except GOS-FOS and plasma IL-1β was reduced by all NDO treatments compared with CON, although this differed per time point for SPR. The neutrophil percentage in BALF was reduced by GOS-L in wk 6, which was associated with a relative increase in macrophages. The BALF concentration of TNFα and IL-8 was reduced or tended to be reduced by GOS-L and GOS-H, while IL-6 was or tended to be reduced by SPR, GOS-L, GOS-H, and GOS-FOS, and IL-1β was reduced by SPR, GOS-L, GOS-H, and FOS. Generally, feeding the combination of GOS and FOS was not more effective than feeding GOS or FOS alone, because feeding GOS-FOS resulted in higher concentrations of plasma and BALF cytokine and chemokine concentrations compared with feeding GOS-L alone, and resulted in higher plasma cytokine concentrations compared with feeding FOS alone. None of the BALF and plasma cytokine or chemokine concentrations differed between the GOS-L and GOS-H treatment. Performance and clinical scores in period 2 did not differ among treatments. Altogether, all tested NDO reduced systemic and lung inflammation in calves under high natural infection pressure and for GOS-fed calves, this increased performance during the first 4 wk. Combining GOS and FOS did not have a synergistic effect. The intranasal administration of GOS also lowered systemic and lung inflammation, but tended to negatively affect performance. Overall, this study demonstrates the potential of NDO to alleviate systemic and respiratory inflammation in calves

    Galacto-oligosaccharides alleviate lung inflammation by inhibiting NLRP3 inflammasome activation in vivo and in vitro

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    Introduction: The lack of effective anti-inflammatory therapies for pneumonia represents a challenge for identifying new alternatives. Non-digestible galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS) are attractive candidates due to their anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects both locally and systemically. Objectives: The anti-inflammatory properties of GOS were investigated in calves with lung infections and in calf primary bronchial epithelial cells (PBECs) and human lung epithelial cells (A549). To delineate the mechanism, the potential capacity of GOS to inhibit the NLR family pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome has been investigated. Methods: GOS were administrated orally to calves with naturally occurring lung infections during early life or used as pretreatments in cell cultures exposed to M. haemolytica, lipopolysaccharides (LPS), leukotoxin or ATP. The cell composition, cytokine/chemokine concentrations, and M. haemolytica-LPS lgG levels in broncho-alveolar lavage fluid (BALF) and blood were investigated, while the M. haemolytica positivity in BALF and bronchial mucosa was detected in vivo. Key markers of NLRP3 inflammasome activation were measured in vivo and in vitro. Results: GOS reduced M. haemolytica positivity and M. haemolytica-LPS lgG levels in calves with lung infections. Regulation of immune function and suppression of inflammatory response by GOS is related to the inhibition of NLRP3 inflammasome as observed in bronchial mucosal tissue of infected calves. The M. haemolytica-induced IL-1β production in PBECs was lowered by GOS, which was associated with NLRP3 inflammasome inhibition caused by the decreased reactive oxygen species and ATP production. GOS inhibited leukotoxin-induced ATP production in PBECs. The LPS- and ATP-induced NLRP3 inflammasome activation in PBECs and A549 cells was suppressed by GOS. Conclusion: GOS exert anti-inflammatory properties by inhibiting the NLRP3 inflammasome activation in vitro and in vivo, suggesting a potential role for GOS in the prevention of lung infections

    Squeezing of Atoms in a Pulsed Optical Lattice

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    We study the process of squeezing of an ensemble of cold atoms in a pulsed optical lattice. The problem is treated both classically and quantum-mechanically under various thermal conditions. We show that a dramatic compression of the atomic density near the minima of the optical potential can be achieved with a proper pulsing of the lattice. Several strategies leading to the enhanced atomic squeezing are suggested, compared and optimized.Comment: Latex, 9 pages, 10 figures, submitted to PR

    Geotechnical causes for variations in output measured from shallow buried charges

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    The role of the geotechnical conditions on the impulse delivered by a shallow buried charge has received much attention in recent times. As the importance of the soil in these events has become better understood, the control over the geotechnical conditions has improved. While previous work has investigated directly the role of geotechnical conditions on the magnitude of the impulse from a buried charge, the current work aims to identify how these same conditions also affect the repeatability of testing using soils. In this paper the authors draw together their work to date for a wide range of different soil types and moisture contents to investigate the variation in output from nominally identical tests. The methodology for the preparation of soil beds and the measurement of impulse is described along with the measured variations in peak and residual deflections of a target plate fixed to the impulse measurement apparatus
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