346 research outputs found
A map for heavy inertial particles in fluid flows
We introduce a map which reproduces qualitatively many fundamental properties
of the dynamics of heavy particles in fluid flows. These include a uniform rate
of decrease of volume in phase space, a slow-manifold effective dynamics when
the single parameter (analogous of the Stokes number) approaches zero, the
possibility of fold caustics in the "velocity field", and a minimum, as a
function of , of the Lyapunov (Kaplan-Yorke) dimension of the attractor
where particles accumulate.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Black Lawyers Matter: Enduring Racism in American Law Firms
Scholars and practitioners have extensively examined patterns of racial inequality in U.S. corporate law firms. In the corporate bar, pull factors that have long shaped legal professionals’ careers include promotions, outside job offers, and family priorities that may lead to leaving the labor force altogether. Push factors, such as discrimination, problems with management, and work-life conflict, also precipitate work transitions. Beyond corporate firms, however, an urgent question remains open to empirical scrutiny: How does race affect career moves in the contemporary American legal profession?
In this Article, I address this question drawing upon data from the first nationally representative, longitudinal survey of U.S. lawyers. This study is one of few that uses event history analysis as a statistical technique to examine legal careers. It also draws on in-depth interviews to unravel how lawyers view their experiences at firms. These legal professionals detail how race influences assignment distribution and promotion within American law firms. Assessment of work histories of over 4,000 law school graduates, from the time they were admitted to practice in the year 2000, shows that, all else being equal, Black lawyers are pushed out of private law firms at much higher rates than white lawyers. As Black lawyers continue to strive for racial equality, these results indicate that race-conscious remedies remain critical not only for the future of law firms, but also for the broader legal profession
External Forces, Internal Dynamics: Foreign Legal Actors and Their Impact on Domestic Affairs (Book Review)
This Review examines the influence of foreign legal actors on jurisdictions that are not their own. Rachel Stern, a scholar of China, reflects on this point in her groundbreaking book published in 2013. In her penultimate chapter, Stern discusses how such foreign legal actors wield influence in China because of their presence on the ground. Building off of Stern\u27s research, this Review proceeds to ask whether foreign legal actors can influence a domestic environment when that environment prohibits them from permanently working there. The analysis below will suggest so, arguing that the forces of globalization can enable foreign legal actors to impact even a market that keeps its legal-services borders closed
Classical instability of Kerr-AdS black holes and the issue of final state
It is now established that small Kerr-Anti-de Sitter (Kerr-AdS) black holes
are unstable against scalar perturbations, via superradiant amplification
mechanism. We show that small Kerr-AdS black holes are also unstable against
gravitational perturbations and we compute the features of this instability. We
also describe with great detail the evolution of this instability. In
particular, we identify its endpoint state. It corresponds to a Kerr-AdS black
hole whose boundary is an Einstein universe rotating with the light velocity.
This black hole is expected to be slightly oblate and to co-exist in
equilibrium with a certain amount of outside radiation.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex4. v2: small typos corrected. Version to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Small Kerr-anti-de Sitter black holes are unstable
Superradiance in black hole spacetimes can trigger instabilities. Here we
show that, due to superradiance, small Kerr-anti-de Sitter black holes are
unstable. Our demonstration uses a matching procedure, in a long wavelength
approximation.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX
Gravitational radiation in d>4 from effective field theory
Some years ago, a new powerful technique, known as the Classical Effective
Field Theory, was proposed to describe classical phenomena in gravitational
systems. Here we show how this approach can be useful to investigate
theoretically important issues, such as gravitational radiation in any
spacetime dimension. In particular, we derive for the first time the
Einstein-Infeld-Hoffman Lagrangian and we compute Einstein's quadrupole formula
for any number of flat spacetime dimensions.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures. v2: Factor in eq. (3.11) fixed. References
adde
Influence of discrete fibre reinforcement on the uniaxial compression response and seismic wave velocity of a cement-stabilised sandy-clay
A sandy clay from the northeast region of Portugal has been reinforced with polypropylene fibres and cement, and seismic wave velocity measurements and uniaxial compression strength tests were performed. Results showed that the fibre induce variations on the wave's velocity that cannot be related to real changes in the material stiffness. Therefore, care should be used when using this technique in fibre reinforced soils. The addition of fibres resulted in an increase of compression strength of the mixtures, for every cement content. Regarding the stiffness, the fibres proved to be increasingly effective with na increase in cementation, especially at the early stages of the stressestrain curve, when the secant deformability modulus increases with fibre content. However, no influence of the discrete reinforcement was detected on the peak and post-peak stages of the loading process. Fibre length showed also to be influential on strength and stiffness
Perturbations and absorption cross-section of infinite-radius black rings
We study scalar field perturbations on the background of non-supersymmetric
black rings and of supersymmetric black rings. In the infinite-radius limit of
these geometries, we are able to separate the wave equation, and to study wave
phenomena in its vicinities. In this limit, we show that (i) both geometries
are stable against scalar field perturbations, (ii) the absorption
cross-section for scalar fields is equal to the area of the event horizon in
the supersymmetric case, and proportional to it in the non-supersymmetric
situation.Comment: ReVTeX4. 15 pages, 3 figures. References added. Published versio
Instability of non-supersymmetric smooth geometries
Recently certain non-supersymmetric solutions of type IIb supergravity were
constructed [hep-th/0504181], which are everywhere smooth, have no horizons and
are thought to describe certain non-BPS microstates of the D1-D5 system. We
demonstrate that these solutions are all classically unstable. The instability
is a generic feature of horizonless geometries with an ergoregion. We consider
the endpoint of this instability and argue that the solutions decay to
supersymmetric configurations. We also comment on the implications of the
ergoregion instability for Mathur's `fuzzball' proposal.Comment: v2: typos corrected, reference adde
Nariai, Bertotti-Robinson and anti-Nariai solutions in higher dimensions
We find all the higher dimensional solutions of the Einstein-Maxwell theory
that are the topological product of two manifolds of constant curvature. These
solutions include the higher dimensional Nariai, Bertotti-Robinson and
anti-Nariai solutions, and the anti-de Sitter Bertotti-Robinson solutions with
toroidal and hyperbolic topology (Plebanski-Hacyan solutions). We give explicit
results for any dimension D>3. These solutions are generated from the
appropriate extremal limits of the higher dimensional near-extreme black holes
in a de Sitter, and anti-de Sitter backgrounds. Thus, we also find the mass and
the charge parameters of the higher dimensional extreme black holes as a
function of the radius of the degenerate horizon.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, RevTeX4. References added. Published versio
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