4,521 research outputs found
Criteria For Superfluid Instabilities of Geometries with Hyperscaling Violation
We examine the onset of superfluid instabilities for geometries that exhibit
hyperscaling violation and Lifshitz-like scaling at infrared and intermediate
energy scales, and approach AdS in the ultraviolet. In particular, we are
interested in the role of a non-trivial coupling between the neutral scalar
supporting the scaling regime, and the (charged) complex scalar which
condenses. The analysis focuses exclusively on unstable modes arising from the
hyperscaling-violating portion of the geometry. Working at zero temperature, we
identify simple analytical criteria for the presence of scalar instabilities,
and discuss under which conditions a minimal charge will be needed to trigger a
transition. Finite temperature examples are constructed numerically for a few
illustrative cases.Comment: 41 pages, 7 figure
Backreacted DBI Magnetotransport with Momentum Dissipation
We examine magnetotransport in a holographic Dirac-Born-Infeld model, taking
into account the effects of backreaction on the geometry. The theory we
consider includes axionic scalars, introduced to break translational symmetry
and generate momentum dissipation. The generic structure of the DC conductivity
matrix for these theories is extremely rich, and is significantly more complex
than that obtained in the probe approximation. We find new classes of black
brane solutions, including geometries that exhibit Lifshitz scaling and
hyperscaling violation, and examine their implications on the transport
properties of the system. Depending on the choice of theory parameters, these
backgrounds can lead to metallic or insulating behavior. Negative
magnetoresistance is observed in a family of dynoic solutions. Some of the new
backreacted geometries also support magnetic-field-induced metal-insulator
transitions.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures; v2: references added, minor improvements, to
appear in JHE
Holographic Fermions in Striped Phases
We examine the fermionic response in a holographic model of a low temperature
striped phase, working for concreteness with the setup we studied in
[Cremonini:2016rbd,Cremonini:2017usb], in which a U(1) symmetry and
translational invariance are broken spontaneously at the same time. We include
an ionic lattice that breaks translational symmetry explicitly in the UV of the
theory. Thus, this construction realizes spontaneous crystallization on top of
a background lattice. We solve the Dirac equation for a probe fermion in the
associated background geometry using numerical techniques, and explore the
interplay between spontaneous and explicit breaking of translations. We note
that in our model the breaking of the U(1) symmetry doesn't play a role in the
analysis of the fermionic spectral function. We investigate under which
conditions a Fermi surface can form and focus in particular on how the ionic
lattice affects its structure. When the ionic lattice becomes sufficiently
strong the spectral weight peaks broaden, denoting a gradual disappearance of
the Fermi surface along the symmetry breaking direction. This phenomenon occurs
even in the absence of spontaneously generated stripes. The resulting Fermi
surface appears to consist of detached segments reminiscent of Fermi arcs.Comment: v2: 43 pages, 20 figures. Major revision, title and abstract
modified, new discussion added, conclusions unchanged. To appear in JHE
Dilaton Dynamics from Production of Tensionless Membranes
In this paper we consider classical and quantum corrections to cosmological
solutions of 11D SUGRA coming from dynamics of membrane states. We first
consider the supermembrane spectrum following the approach of Russo and
Tseytlin for consistent quantization. We calculate the production rate of BPS
membrane bound states in a cosmological background and find that such effects
are generically suppressed by the Planck scale, as expected. However, for a
modified brane spectrum possessing enhanced symmetry, production can be finite
and significant. We stress that this effect could not be anticipated given only
a knowledge of the low-energy effective theory. Once on-shell, inclusion of
these states leads to an attractive force pulling the dilaton towards a fixed
point of S-duality, namely . Although the SUGRA description breaks down
in this regime, inclusion of the enhanced states suggests that the center of
M-theory moduli space is a dynamical attractor. Morever, our results seem to
suggest that string dynamics does indeed favor a vacuum near fixed points of
duality.Comment: 39 pages, 7 figures, minor corrections and reference adde
Constraints on RG Flows from Holographic Entanglement Entropy
We examine the RG flow of a candidate c-function, extracted from the
holographic entanglement entropy of a strip-shaped region, for theories with
broken Lorentz invariance. We clarify the conditions on the geometry that lead
to a break-down of monotonic RG flows as is expected for generic
Lorentz-violating field theories. Nevertheless we identify a set of simple
criteria on the UV behavior of the geometry which guarantee a monotonic
c-function. Our analysis can thus be used as a guiding principle for the
construction of monotonic RG trajectories, and can also prove useful for
excluding possible IR behaviors of the theory.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
The Effect of Transitions on Access to Higher Education
Explores how the transition process from secondary to higher education affects access to higher education in the Netherlands, South Africa, Ukraine, and the United States. Examines barriers and makes recommendations for expanding "access with success.
The Effect of Security Education and Expertise on Security Assessments: the Case of Software Vulnerabilities
In spite of the growing importance of software security and the industry
demand for more cyber security expertise in the workforce, the effect of
security education and experience on the ability to assess complex software
security problems has only been recently investigated. As proxy for the full
range of software security skills, we considered the problem of assessing the
severity of software vulnerabilities by means of a structured analysis
methodology widely used in industry (i.e. the Common Vulnerability Scoring
System (\CVSS) v3), and designed a study to compare how accurately individuals
with background in information technology but different professional experience
and education in cyber security are able to assess the severity of software
vulnerabilities. Our results provide some structural insights into the complex
relationship between education or experience of assessors and the quality of
their assessments. In particular we find that individual characteristics matter
more than professional experience or formal education; apparently it is the
\emph{combination} of skills that one owns (including the actual knowledge of
the system under study), rather than the specialization or the years of
experience, to influence more the assessment quality. Similarly, we find that
the overall advantage given by professional expertise significantly depends on
the composition of the individual security skills as well as on the available
information.Comment: Presented at the Workshop on the Economics of Information Security
(WEIS 2018), Innsbruck, Austria, June 201
On Non-Canonical Kinetic Terms and the Tilt of the Power Spectrum
We argue that in models of inflation with two scalar fields and non-canonical
kinetic terms there is a possibility of obtaining a red tilt of the power
spectrum of curvature perturbations from noncanonicality-induced interactions
between the curvature and isocurvature perturbations. We describe an extremely
simple model realizing this idea, study numerically its predictions for the
perturbations and discuss applications in realistic scenarios of inflation. We
discuss to what extent in this model the scale of the inflationary potential
can be decoupled from the amplitude of the density fluctuations.Comment: typos corrected, discussion slightly modified, matches published
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