1,129 research outputs found
Coupling supergravity to non-supersymmetric matter
By introducing a nonlinearly transforming goldstino field
non-super\-sym\-metric matter can be coupled to supergravity. This implies the
possibility of coupling a standard model with one Higgs to supergravity.Comment: 11 pages, LATEX, references adde
Quantum entanglement of charges in bound states with finite-size dyons
We show that the presence of finite-size monopoles can lead to a number of
interesting physical processes involving quantum entanglement of charges.
Taking as a model the classical solution of the N=2 SU(2) Yang-Mills theory, we
study interaction between dyons and scalar particles in the adjoint and
fundamental representation. We find that there are bound states of scalars and
dyons, which, remarkably, are always an entangled configuration of the form
|\psi > =|dyon+> |scalar-> +/- |dyon->|scalar+>. We determine the energy levels
and the wave functions and also discuss their stability.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures. Minor correction in references (to appear in
JHEP04 (2002) 010
A randomised double-blind comparison of intravenous pamidronate and clodronate in the hypercalcaemia of malignancy
In conjunction with rehydration, the bisphosphonates are the treatment of choice for hypercalcaemia of malignancy. Single infusions of either pamidronate or clodronate are usually effective, but a direct comparison of the two agents given at the highest doses commonly used has not been performed. Forty-one patients (15 breast, 12 squamous carcinomas, four lymphomas, four bladder, two prostate and four others) with hypercalcaemia of malignancy (corrected serum calcium > 2.7 mmol l-1) persisting after 48 h of saline rehydration were randomly allocated to receive a 4 h intravenous (i.v.) infusion of either pamidronate 90 mg or clodronate 1500 mg. No other systemic anti-cancer treatment was prescribed. There were no significant differences in the post-hydration serum calcium values (mean 3.17 mmol l-1 for pamidronate and 3.06 mmol l-1 for clodronate), tumour type or frequency of bone metastases between the two treatments. One patient on each treatment died within 2 days and was not assessable for response. A total of 19/19 (100%) patients achieved normocalcaemia following pamidronate and 16/20 (80%) with clodronate. The median time to achieve normocalcaemia was 4 days (range 2-14) for pamidronate and 3 days (range 2-6) with clodronate. The median duration of normocalcaemia was 28 days (range 10-28+ days) after pamidronate and 14 days after clodronate (range 7-21 days) (P 28 days respectively. Two patients experienced fever after pamidronate but no significant toxicity was observed with either treatment. We conclude that both agents are effective in the management of hypercalcaemia of malignancy. At the doses studied, the effects of pamidronate are more complete and longer lasting than those of clodronate
A Note on Fluxes and Superpotentials in M-theory Compactifications on Manifolds of G_2 Holonomy
We consider the breaking of N=1 supersymmetry by non-zero G-flux when
M-theory is compactified on a smooth manifold X of G_2 holonomy. Gukov has
proposed a superpotential W to describe this breaking in the low-energy
effective theory. We check this proposal by comparing the bosonic potential
implied by W with the corresponding potential deduced from the
eleven-dimensional supergravity action. One interesting aspect of this check is
that, though W depends explicitly only on G-flux supported on X, W also
describes the breaking of supersymmetry by G-flux transverse to X.Comment: 15 pages, harvmac, v2: reference adde
High Temperature Phase Transitions in Two-Scalar Theories with Large Techniques
We consider a theory of a scalar one-component field coupled to a
scalar -component field . Using large techiques we calculate the
effective potential in the leading order in . We show that this is
equivalent to a resummation of an infinite subclass of graphs in perturbation
theory, which involve fluctuations of the field only. We study the
temperature dependence of the expectation value of the field and the
resulting first and second order phase transitions.Comment: 11 pages, LaTex, includes 5 uuencoded postscript figures, OUTP-94-11
Gauged Fermionic Q-balls
We present a new model for a non-topological soliton (NTS) that contains
interacting fermions, scalar particles and a gauge field. Using a variational
approach, we estimate the energy of the localized configuration, showing that
it can be the lowest energy state of the system for a wide range of parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Bathymetric extent of recent trawl damage to the seabed captured by an ROV transect in the Alboran Sea
Bottom trawl fishing is among the most destructive anthropogenic pressures acting on benthic ecosystems, but the full extent of the damage is undocumented because of the limited number of deep-sea observations of impacted regions (e.g., Brennan et al., 2012, 2016). As part of its continuing ocean exploration mission, in 2011, E/V Nautilus conducted a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) survey along a transect in a submarine canyon in the Mediterranean's Alboran Sea off southern Spain at depths ranging from 1,200 m to <300 m (Coleman et al., 2012). This exploration along the South Alboran Ridge offered the opportunity to directly observe with video the bathymetric extent and intensity of recent trawling damage to the seafloor in this area. This dive revealed large furrows running in multiple directions caused by trawl doors scraping across the seabed. Little biological activity was evident in the depth ranges where these scars were observed. The destructive nature of bottom trawl fishing should be viewed with the same public affront as subaerial clear-cutting of forests and strip-mining. The only difference is that the ocean hides trawl damage from the public eye. The more we explore the deep sea, repeatedly map the seafloor with sonar, and observe the seabed and its ecosystems with video captured by ROVs, the greater we can understand the full impacts of trawling
Monopoles, noncommutative gauge theories in the BPS limit and some simple gauge groups
For three conspicuous gauge groups, namely, SU(2), SU(3) and SO(5), and at
first order in the noncommutative parameter matrix h\theta^{\mu\nu}, we
construct smooth monopole --and, some two-monopole-- fields that solve the
noncommutative Yang-Mills-Higgs equations in the BPS limit and that are formal
power series in h\theta^{\mu\nu}. We show that there exist noncommutative BPS
(multi-)monopole field configurations that are formal power series in
h\theta^{\mu\nu} if, and only if, two a priori free parameters of the
Seiberg-Witten map take very specific values. These parameters, that are not
associated to field redefinitions nor to gauge transformations, have thus
values that give rise to sharp physical effects.Comment: 30 pages, no figure
Thermal Hall conductivity of marginal Fermi liquids subject to out-of plane impurities in high- cuprates
The effect of out-of-plane impurities on the thermal Hall conductivity
of in-plane marginal-Fermi-liquid (MFL) quasiparticles in
high- cuprates is examined by following the work on electrical Hall
conductivity by Varma and Abraham [Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 4652
(2001)]. It is shown that the effective Lorentz force exerted by these
impurities is a weak function of energies of the MFL quasiparticles, resulting
in nearly the same temperature dependence of and ,
indicative of obedience of the Wiedemann-Franz law. The inconsistency of the
theoretical result with the experimental one is speculated to be the
consequence of the different amounts of out-of-plane impurities in the two
YBaCuO samples used for the and measurements.Comment: 5 pages, 2 eps figures; final versio
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