665 research outputs found
Semiclassical correlators of three states with large S^5 charges in string theory in AdS_5 x S^5
We consider semiclassical computation of 3-point correlation functions of
(BPS or non-BPS) string states represented by vertex operators carrying large
charges in S5. We argue that the AdS5 part of the construction of relevant
semiclassical solution involves the two basic ingredients: (i) configuration of
three glued geodesics in AdS2 suggested by Klose and McLoughlin in
arXiv:1106.0495 and (ii) a particular Schwarz-Christoffel map of the 3-geodesic
solution in cylindrical (tau, sigma) domain into the complex plane with three
marked points. This map is constructed using the expression for the AdS2 string
stress tensor which is uniquely determined by the 3 scaling dimensions as noted
by Janik and Wereszczynski in arXiv:1109.6262 (our solution, however, is
different from theirs). We also find the S5 part of the solution and thus the
full expression for the semiclassical part of the 3-point correlator for
several examples: extremal and non-extremal correlators of BPS states and a
particular correlator of "small" circular spinning strings in S3 part of S5. We
demonstrate that for the BPS correlators the results agree with the large
charge limit of the corresponding supergravity and free gauge theory
expressions.Comment: 43 pages, 4 figures; v2: minor corrections; v3: comments added at the
end of section 3 and in section 5; v4: minor corrections; v5: discussion in
subsection 3.3 correcte
A New Galactic Extinction Map of the Cygnus Region
We have made a Galactic extinction map of the Cygnus region with 5' spatial
resolution. The selected area is 80^\circ to 90^\circ in the Galactic longitude
and -4^\circ to 8^\circ in the Galactic latitude. The intensity at 140 \mum is
derived from the intensities at 60 and 100 \mum of the IRAS data using the
tight correlation between 60, 100, and 140 \mum found in the Galactic plane.
The dust temperature and optical depth are calculated with 5' resolution from
the 140 and 100 \mum intensity, and Av is calculated from the optical depth. In
the selected area, the mean dust temperature is 17 K, the minimum is 16 K, and
the maximum is 30 K. The mean Av is 6.5 mag, the minimum is 0.5 mag, and the
maximum is 11 mag. The dust temperature distribution shows significant spatial
variation on smaller scales down to 5'. Because the present study can trace the
5'-scale spatial variation of the extinction, it has an advantage over the
previous studies, such as the one by Schlegel, Finkbeiner, & Davis, who used
the COBE/DIRBE data to derive the dust temperature distribution with a spatial
resolution of 1^\circ. The difference of Av between our map and Schlegel et
al.'s is \pm 3 mag. A new extinction map of the entire sky can be produced by
applying the present method.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Weight Reduction by Effective Protocol of Diet and Exercise
Background: Metabolic syndrome (Met-S) and Locomotive syndrome (Loc-S) have been in focus for years. Authors have reduced weight of patients with Met-S and Loc-S by exercise and Low Carbohydrate Diet (LCD). Moreover, we continued clinical research and enlightening activity about LCD through Japan LCD Promoting Association (JLCDPA).
Intervention Program: Enrolled subjects were obese patients with 715 men and 2058 women with 62.2 ± 12.1 years. They attended the intervention of weight reduction program by LCD and exercise. The advisers were registered dietitian nutritionists (RDNs) and physical/exercise therapists, and they regularly interviewed the cases for 6-12 months. LCD included 33% of carbohydrate, and exercise included aerobic and anaerobic exercises with 10 kinds of machines.
Results and Discussion: The pre-weight vs post-weight is 63.7 ± 11.6 kg vs 59.4±10.8 kg in average, and 61.8 kg vs 57.5 kg in median. Further, quartiles values on 25%-75% were 55.5 kg-69.9 kg vs 51.5 kg-65.3 kg, respectively. The weight reduction was 6.6% in average, and 2.6%-9.8% in quartiles 25%-75%. The distribution shape of both pre- and post-weight in the figure showed slight shift to left direction by 4.3 kg in average. These results suggest that combined therapy would be successful in the presence of advisers, and that data would become basal data for future research
Effective Nutritional Guidance for Obesity by Low Carbohydrate Diet (LCD)
Background: Authors have continued treating patients with obesity and metabolic syndrome by application of Low Carbohydrate Diet (LCD). Furthermore, we have continued presenting various reports about nutrition and educational guidance and developing LCD medically and socially through the activity of Japan LCD Promoting Association (JLCDPA).
Study Protocol: Subjects enrolled were 2773 patients with obesity who received nutritional guidance in our clinic. Methods include i) weight reduction program on the intervention of LCD and guidance by registered dietitian nutritionist (RDN), ii) LCD with 33% of carbohydrate, and iii) Practice of guidance including self-monitoring, lifestyle, motivation, determination for the goal, evaluation.
Results and Discussion: Nutritional guidance has been carried out on a regular basis by three RDNs. Weight reduction was: 10% or more was observed in 666 (24.0%), and 5.0 - 9.9% was in 863 (31.2%). In other words, the reduction of 5.0% or more was 55.2%, and 3.0% or more was 71.4%. Our nutritional guidance has been made as a manual for weight reduction program. It includes various factors, such as Self-Regulation Empowerment, cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational interviewing. These results would become basal and reference data for future research in the field of weight reduction
Existence of Dynamical Scaling in the Temporal Signal of Time Projection Chamber
The temporal signals from a large gas detector may show dynamical scaling due
to many correlated space points created by the charged particles while passing
through the tracking medium. This has been demonstrated through simulation
using realistic parameters of a Time Projection Chamber (TPC) being fabricated
to be used in ALICE collider experiment at CERN. An interesting aspect of this
dynamical behavior is the existence of an universal scaling which does not
depend on the multiplicity of the collision. This aspect can be utilised
further to study physics at the device level and also for the online monitoring
of certain physical observables including electronics noise which are a few
crucial parameters for the optimal TPC performance.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
A note on string solutions in AdS_3
We systematically search for classical open string solutions in AdS_3 within
the general class expressed by elliptic functions (i.e., the genus-one
finite-gap solutions). By explicitly solving the reality and Virasoro
conditions, we give a classification of the allowed solutions. When the
elliptic modulus degenerates, we find a class of solutions with six null
boundaries, among which two pairs are collinear. By adding the S^1 sector, we
also find four-cusp solutions with null boundaries expressed by the elliptic
functions.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure; (v2) added 1 figure and discussion on solutions
with 6 null boundaries; (v3) corrected equation numbers; (v4) added comment
Divergence Cancellation and Loop Corrections in String Field Theory on a Plane Wave Background
We investigate the one-loop energy shift E to certain two-impurity string
states in light-cone string field theory on a plane wave background. We find
that there exist logarithmic divergences in the sums over intermediate mode
numbers which cancel between the cubic Hamiltonian and quartic ``contact
term''. Analyzing the impurity non-conserving channel we find that the
non-perturbative, order g_2^2 sqrt(lambda') contribution to E/mu predicted in
hep-th/0211220 is in fact an artifact of these logarithmic divergences and
vanishes with them, leaving an order g_2^2 lambda' contribution. Exploiting the
supersymmetry algebra, we present a form for the energy shift which appears to
be manifestly convergent and free of non-perturbative terms. We use this form
to argue that E/mu receives order g_2^2 lambda' contributions at every order in
intermediate state impurities.Comment: 27 pages; added references, acknowledgments, missing normalization in
equations 2.3 - 2.8, also cleaned up notation, and added a few footnote
The nature of the dense core population in the pipe nebula: core and cloud kinematics from C18O observations
We present molecular-line observations of 94 dark cloud cores identified in
the Pipe nebula through near-IR extinction mapping. Using the Arizona Radio
Observatory 12m telescope, we obtained spectra of these cores in the J=1-0
transition of C18O. We use the measured core parameters, i.e., antenna
temperature, linewidth, radial velocity, radius and mass, to explore the
internal kinematics of these cores as well as their radial motions through the
larger molecular cloud. We find that the vast majority of the dark extinction
cores are true cloud cores rather than the superposition of unrelated
filaments. While we identify no significant correlations between the core's
internal gas motions and the cores' other physical parameters, we identify
spatially correlated radial velocity variations that outline two main kinematic
components of the cloud. The largest is a 15pc long filament that is
surprisingly narrow both in spatial dimensions and in radial velocity.
Beginning in the Stem of the Pipe, this filament displays uniformly small C18O
linewidths (dv~0.4kms-1) as well as core to core motions only slightly in
excess of the gas sound speed. The second component outlines what appears to be
part of a large (2pc; 1000 solar mass) ring-like structure. Cores associated
with this component display both larger linewidths and core to core motions
than in the main cloud. The Pipe Molecular Ring may represent a primordial
structure related to the formation of this cloud.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. 14 pages, 11 figures. Complete table at end of
documen
NICEST, a near-infrared color excess method tailored for small-scale structures
Observational data and theoretical calculations show that significant
small-scale substructures are present in dark molecular clouds. These
inhomogeneities can provide precious hints on the physical conditions inside
the clouds, but can also severely bias extinction measurements. We present
NICEST, a novel method to account and correct for inhomogeneities in molecular
cloud extinction studies. The method, tested against numerical simulations,
removes almost completely the biases introduced by sub-pixel structures and by
the contamination of foreground stars. We applied NICEST to 2MASS data of the
Pipe molecular complex. The map thereby obtained shows significantly higher (up
to 0.41 mag in A_K) extinction peaks than the standard NICER (Lombardi et al.
2001) map. This first application confirms that substructures in nearby
molecular clouds, if not accounted for, can significantly bias extinction
measurements in regions with A_K > 1 mag; the effect, moreover, is expected to
increase in more distant molecular cloud, because of the poorer physical
resolution achievable.Comment: 13 pages, A&A in pres
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