528 research outputs found
Fate of Kaluza-Klein Bubble
We numerically study classical time evolutions of Kaluza-Klein bubble
space-time which has negative energy after a decay of vacuum. As the zero
energy Witten's bubble space-time, where the bubble expands infinitely, the
subsequent evolutions of Brill and Horowitz's momentarily static initial data
show that the bubble will expand in terms of the area. At first glance, this
result may support Corley and Jacobson's conjecture that the bubble will expand
forever as well as the Witten's bubble. The irregular signatures, however, can
be seen in the behavior of the lapse function in the maximal slicing gauge and
the divergence of the Kretchman invariant. Since there is no appearance of the
apparent horizon, we suspect an appearance of a naked singularity as the final
fate of this space-time.Comment: 13 pages including 10 figures, RevTeX, epsf.sty. CGPG-99/12-8,
RESCEU-6/00 and DAMTP-2000-30. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Medical Students Cultural Attitudes: The Health Belief Attitudes Survey
Cultural competent care is the ability to deliver effective medical care to people from different cultures. The lack of methodological rigor and paucity of psychometric properties information of the instruments limits the generalizability of cultural competency educational interventions. We examined cultural attitudes of first year medical students and examined psychometric properties of the scale to better define the constructs it intends to measure. In a cross-sectional study, first year medical students completed the Health Belief Attitudes Survey (HBAS) in September of their matriculating year (2011-2013) within the context of Introduction to Clinical Medicine. The survey has15 items scored on a 6-point Likert scale (1-6), higher score indicates higher culturally competent attitudes. We used factor analysis to explore constructs and examine internal consistency (Cronbachâs alpha). The response rate was 98% (536/548), 42.2% students were female (n=231), 73.0% (n=400) white, 14.6% Asian (n=80), and 4.4% African American (n=24)(4.9%, n=27, did not provide race or ethnicity). The HBAS median score was 5.3 (25th percentile [Q1], 4.9; 75th percentile [Q3], 5.7). A two-factor solution explained 97% of the variance with Eigenvalues of 5.6 and 1.2, respectively. We conceptualized the constructs as âUnderstanding the Patientsâ Cultural and Socio-Economic Backgroundâ (Factor 1, 11 items; Cronbachâs alpha, 0.89). âBuilding the Professional Relationship and Quality of Careâ (Factor 2, 4 items; Cronbachâs alpha, 0.74). First year medical students have high culturally-relevant attitudes. The HBAS instrument captures two main constructs, understanding the patientsâ background and perspective and building the professional relationship
A paradox of syntactic priming: why response tendencies show priming for passives, and response latencies show priming for actives
Speakers tend to repeat syntactic structures across sentences, a phenomenon called syntactic priming. Although it has been suggested that repeating syntactic structures should result in speeded responses, previous research has focused on effects in response tendencies. We investigated syntactic priming effects simultaneously in response tendencies and response latencies for active and passive transitive sentences in a picture description task. In Experiment 1, there were priming effects in response tendencies for passives and in response latencies for actives. However, when participants' pre-existing preference for actives was altered in Experiment 2, syntactic priming occurred for both actives and passives in response tendencies as well as in response latencies. This is the first investigation of the effects of structure frequency on both response tendencies and latencies in syntactic priming. We discuss the implications of these data for current theories of syntactic processing
Metric Fluctuation Corrections to Hawking Radiation
We study how fluctuations of the black hole geometry affect the properties of
Hawking radiation. Even though we treat the fluctuations classically, we
believe that the results so obtained indicate what might be the effects induced
by quantum fluctuations in a self consistent treatment. To characterize the
fluctuations, we use the model introduced by York in which they are described
by an advanced Vaidya metric with a fluctuating mass. Under the assumption of
spherical symmetry, we solve the equation of null outgoing rays. Then, by
neglecting the greybody factor, we calculate the late time corrections to the
s-wave contributions of the energy flux and the asymptotic spectrum. We find
three kind of modifications. Firstly, the energy flux fluctuates around its
average value with amplitudes and frequencies determined by those of the metric
fluctuations. Secondly, this average value receives two positive contributions
one of which can be reinterpreted as due to the `renormalisation' of the
surface gravity induced by the metric fluctuations. Finally, the asymptotic
spectrum is modified by the addition of terms containing thermal factors in
which the frequency of the metric fluctuations acts as a chemical potential.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX. Revised versio
Meson Spectroscopy in AdS/CFT with Flavour
We compute the meson spectrum of an N=2 super Yang-Mills theory with
fundamental matter from its dual string theory on AdS_5 x S_5 with a D7-brane
probe. For scalar and vector mesons with arbitrary R-charge the spectrum is
computed in closed form by solving the equations for D7-brane fluctuations; for
matter with non-zero mass m_q it is discrete, exhibits a mass gap of order m_q
/ sqrt(g_s N) and furnishes representations of SO(5) even though the manifest
global symmetry of the theory is only SO(4). The spectrum of mesons with large
spin J is obtained from semiclassical, rotating open strings attached to the
D7-brane. It displays Regge-like behaviour for J << sqrt(g_s N), whereas for J
>> sqrt(g_s N) it corresponds to that of two non-relativistic quarks bound by a
Coulomb potential. Meson interactions, baryons and `giant gauge bosons' are
briefly discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 39 pages, 4 figures, uses epsf. v2: typos corrected.
references adde
The entropy of black holes: a primer
After recalling the definition of black holes, and reviewing their energetics
and their classical thermodynamics, one expounds the conjecture of Bekenstein,
attributing an entropy to black holes, and the calculation by Hawking of the
semi-classical radiation spectrum of a black hole, involving a thermal
(Planckian) factor. One then discusses the attempts to interpret the black-hole
entropy as the logarithm of the number of quantum micro-states of a macroscopic
black hole, with particular emphasis on results obtained within string theory.
After mentioning the (technically cleaner, but conceptually more intricate)
case of supersymmetric (BPS) black holes and the corresponding counting of the
degeneracy of Dirichlet-brane systems, one discusses in some detail the
``correspondence'' between massive string states and non-supersymmetric
Schwarzschild black holes.Comment: 51 pages, 4 figures, talk given at the "Poincare seminar" (Paris, 6
December 2003), to appear in Poincare Seminar 2003 (Birkhauser
A Spin Chain for the Symmetric Product CFT_2
We consider "gauge invariant" operators in Sym^N T^4, the symmetric product
orbifold of N copies of the 2d supersymmetric sigma model with T^4 target. We
discuss a spin chain representation for single-cycle operators and study their
two point functions at large N. We perform systematic calculations at the
orbifold point ("tree level"), where non-trivial mixing is already present, and
some sample calculations to first order in the blow-up mode of the orbifold
("one loop").Comment: 52 pages, 10 figure
Strings on Bubbling Geometries
We study gauge theory operators which take the form of a product of a trace
with a Schur polynomial, and their string theory duals. These states represent
strings excited on bubbling AdS geometries which are dual to the Schur
polynomials. These geometries generically take the form of multiple annuli in
the phase space plane. We study the coherent state wavefunction of the lattice,
which labels the trace part of the operator, for a general Young tableau and
their dual description on the droplet plane with a general concentric ring
pattern. In addition we identify a density matrix over the coherent states on
all the geometries within a fixed constraint. This density matrix may be used
to calculate the entropy of a given ensemble of operators. We finally recover
the BMN string spectrum along the geodesic near any circle from the ansatz of
the coherent state wavefunction.Comment: 41 pages, 12 figures, published version in JHE
The decline in stomach cancer mortality: exploration of future trends in seven European countries
Mortality from stomach cancer has fallen steadily during the past decades. The aim of this paper is to assess the implication of a possible continuation of the decline in stomach cancer mortality until the year 2030. Annual rates of decline in stomach cancer mortality from 1980 to 2005 were determined for the Netherlands, United Kingdom, France, and four Nordic countries on the basis of regression analysis. Mortality rates were extrapolated until 2030, assuming the same rate of decline as in the past, using three possible scenarios. The absolute numbers of deaths were projected taking into account data on the ageing of national populations. Stomach cancer mortality rates declined between 1980 and 2005 at about the same rate (3.6â4.9% per year) for both men and women in all countries. The rate of decline did not level off in recent years, and it was not smaller in countries with lower overall mortality rates in 1980. If this decline were to continue into the future, stomach cancer mortality rates would decline with about 66% between 2005 and 2030 in most populations, while the absolute number of stomach cancer deaths would diminish by about 50%. Thus, in view of the strong, stable and consistent mortality declines in recent decades, and despite population ageing, stomach cancer is likely to become far less important as a cause of death in Europe in the future
Can weight loss prevent cancer?
We review and update evidence on obesity, weight gain and weight loss in relation to leading cancers since the International Agency for Research on Cancer report of 2002. Emphasis is placed on the time course of disease and implications for weight control to prevent cancer. We conclude that weight loss could prevent a major portion of common cancers
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