8,990 research outputs found
Charged Rotating Black Hole Formation from Thin Shell Collapse in Three Dimensions
The thin shell collapse leading to the formation of charged rotating black
holes in three dimensions is analyzed in the light of a recently developed
Hamiltonian formalism for these systems. It is proposed to demand, as a way to
reconcile the properties of an infinitely extended solenoid in flat space with
a magnetic black hole in three dimensions, that the magnetic field should
vanish just outside the shell. The adoption of this boundary condition results
in an exterior solution with a magnetic field different from zero at a finite
distance from the shell. The interior solution is also found and assigns
another interpretation, in a different context, to the magnetic solution
previously obtained by Cl\'{e}ment and by Hirschmann and Welch.Comment: 15 pages, no figures. Discussion on junction conditions and
conclusions enlarged. Few references added. Final version for MPL
Noncommutative Black Holes and the Singularity Problem
A phase-space noncommutativity in the context of a Kantowski-Sachs
cosmological model is considered to study the interior of a Schwarzschild black
hole. Due to the divergence of the probability of finding the black hole at the
singularity from a canonical noncommutativity, one considers a non-canonical
noncommutativity. It is shown that this more involved type of noncommutativity
removes the problem of the singularity in a Schwarzschild black hole.Comment: Based on a talk by CB at ERE2010, Granada, Spain, 6th-10th September
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Rotating Dilaton Solutions in 2+1 Dimensions
We report a three parameter family of solutions for dilaton gravity in 2+1
dimensions with finite mass and finite angular momentum. These solutions are
obtained by a compactification of vacuum solutions in 3+1 dimensions with
cylindrical symmetry. One class of solutions corresponds to conical
singularities and the other leads to curvature singularities.Comment: Accepted to be published in Gen. Rel. Grav., added reference
Entropic Gravity, Phase-Space Noncommutativity and the Equivalence Principle
We generalize E. Verlinde's entropic gravity reasoning to a phase-space
noncommutativity set-up. This allow us to impose a bound on the product of the
noncommutative parameters based on the Equivalence Principle. The key feature
of our analysis is an effective Planck's constant that naturally arises when
accounting for the noncommutative features of the phase-space.Comment: 12 pages. Version to appear at the Classical and Quantum Gravit
Phenotypic stability via ammi model with bootstrap re-sampling.
As posições críticas dos estatísticos, que atuam em programas de melhoramento genético, referem-se à falta de uma análise criteriosa da estrutura da interação do genótipo com o ambiente (GE) como um dos principais problemas para a recomendação de cultivares. A metodologia AMMI (additive main effects and multiplicative interaction analysis) propõe ser mais eficiente que as análises usuais na interpretação e compreensão da interação GE, entretanto, à dificuldade de se interpretar a interação quando há baixa explicação do primeiro componente principal; à dificuldade de se quantificar os escores como baixos, considerando estável os genótipos e/ou ambientes, além de não apresentar o padrão de resposta do genótipo, o que caracteriza os padrões de adaptabilidade, mostram-se como os principais pontos negativos. Visando minimizar esses problemas desenvolveu-se uma metodologia via reamostragem "bootstrap", no modelo AMMI. Foram analisadas 20 progênies de Eucalyptus grandis, procedentes da Austrália, e implantadas em sete testes de progênies nas regiões Sul e Sudeste do Brasil, sendo a interação GE significativa (valor p<0,001). A metodologia "bootstrap" AMMI eliminou as dúvidas relacionadas e mostrou-se precisa e confiável. O coeficiente "bootstrap" de estabilidade (CBE), baseado na distância quadrada de Mahalanobis, obtidos através da região de predição para o vetor nulo, mostrou-se adequado para predições das estabilidades fenotípicas
Properties of Solutions in 2+1 Dimensions
We solve the Einstein equations for the 2+1 dimensions with and without
scalar fields. We calculate the entropy, Hawking temperature and the emission
probabilities for these cases. We also compute the Newman-Penrose coefficients
for different solutions and compare them.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figures, PlainTeX, Dedicated to Prof. Yavuz Nutku on his
60th birthday. References adde
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