14,644 research outputs found
Running anti-de Sitter radius from QCD-like strings
We consider renormalization effects for a bosonic QCD-like string, whose
partons have propagators instead of Gaussian. Classically this model
resembles (the bosonic part of) the projective light-cone (zero-radius) limit
of a string on an AdS background, where Schwinger parameters give rise to
the fifth dimension. Quantum effects generate dynamics for this dimension,
producing an AdS background with a running radius. The projective
light-cone is the high-energy limit: Holography is enforced dynamically.Comment: 12 page
A proposal for a first class conversion formalism based on the symmetries of the Wess-Zumino terms
We propose a new procedure to embed second class systems by introducing
Wess-Zumino (WZ) fields in order to unveil hidden symmetries existent in the
models. This formalism is based on the direct imposition that the new
Hamiltonian must be invariant by gauge-symmetry transformations. An
interesting feature in this approach is the possibility to find a
representation for the WZ fields in a convenient way, which leads to preserve
the gauge symmetry in the original phase space. Consequently, the
gauge-invariant Hamiltonian can be written only in terms of the original
phase-space variables. In this situation, the WZ variables are only auxiliary
tools that permit to reveal the hidden symmetries present in the original
second class model. We apply this formalism to important physical models: the
reduced-SU(2) Skyrme model, the Chern-Simons-Proca quantum mechanics and the
chiral bosons field theory. In all these systems, the gauge-invariant
Hamiltonians are derived in a very simple way.Comment: Revised version. Title changed for Gauging by symmetries. To appear
in IJMP
Behavioural clusters and predictors of performance during recovery from stroke
We examined the patterns and variability of recovery post-stroke in multiple behavioral domains. A large cohort of first time stroke patients with heterogeneous lesions was studied prospectively and longitudinally at 1-2 weeks, 3 months and one year post-injury with structural MRI to measure lesion anatomy and in-depth neuropsychological assessment. Impairment was described at all timepoints by a few clusters of correlated deficits. The time course and magnitude of recovery was similar across domains, with change scores largely proportional to the initial deficit and most recovery occurring within the first three months. Damage to specific white matter tracts produced poorer recovery over several domains: attention and superior longitudinal fasciculus II/III, language and posterior arcuate fasciculus, motor and corticospinal tract. Finally, after accounting for the severity of the initial deficit, language and visual memory recovery/outcome was worse with lower education, while the occurrence of multiple deficits negatively impacted attention recovery
A Computational Procedure to Detect a New Type of High Dimensional Chaotic Saddle and its Application to the 3-D Hill's Problem
A computational procedure that allows the detection of a new type of
high-dimensional chaotic saddle in Hamiltonian systems with three degrees of
freedom is presented. The chaotic saddle is associated with a so-called
normally hyperbolic invariant manifold (NHIM). The procedure allows to compute
appropriate homoclinic orbits to the NHIM from which we can infer the existence
a chaotic saddle. NHIMs control the phase space transport across an equilibrium
point of saddle-centre-...-centre stability type, which is a fundamental
mechanism for chemical reactions, capture and escape, scattering, and, more
generally, ``transformation'' in many different areas of physics. Consequently,
the presented methods and results are of broad interest. The procedure is
illustrated for the spatial Hill's problem which is a well known model in
celestial mechanics and which gained much interest e.g. in the study of the
formation of binaries in the Kuiper belt.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, pdflatex, submitted to JPhys
Variant supercurrent multiplets
In N = 1 rigid supersymmetric theories, there exist three standard
realizations of the supercurrent multiplet corresponding to the (i) old
minimal, (ii) new minimal and (iii) non-minimal off-shell formulations for N =
1 supergravity. Recently, Komargodski and Seiberg in arXiv:1002.2228 put
forward a new supercurrent and proved its consistency, although in the past it
was believed not to exist. In this paper, three new variant supercurrent
multiplets are proposed. Implications for supergravity-matter systems are
discussed.Comment: 11 pages; V2: minor changes in sect. 3; V3: published version; V4:
typos in eq. (2.3) corrected; V5: comments and references adde
Terahertz local oscillator sources: performance and capabilities
Frequency multiplier circuits based on planar GaAs Schottky diodes have advanced significantly in the last decade. Useful power in the >1 THz range has now been demonstrated from a complete solid-state chain. This paper will review some of the technologies that have led to this achievement along with a brief look at future challenges
Closed String Amplitudes from Gauge Fixed String Field Theory
Closed string diagrams are derived from cubic open string field theory using
a gauge fixed kinetic operator. The basic idea is to use a string propagator
that does not generate a boundary to the world sheet. Using this propagator and
the closed string vertex, the moduli space of closed string surfaces is
covered, so closed string scattering amplitudes should be reproduced. This
kinetic operator could be a gauge fixed form of the string field theory action
around the closed string vacuum.Comment: 10 pages, revtex, 3 figures. Discussion on the covering of moduli
expanded, version to appear in PR
Effects of small surface tension in Hele-Shaw multifinger dynamics: an analytical and numerical study
We study the singular effects of vanishingly small surface tension on the
dynamics of finger competition in the Saffman-Taylor problem, using the
asymptotic techniques described in [S. Tanveer, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. A
343, 155 (1993)]and [M. Siegel, and S. Tanveer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 419
(1996)] as well as direct numerical computation, following the numerical scheme
of [T. Hou, J. Lowengrub, and M. Shelley,J. Comp. Phys. 114, 312 (1994)]. We
demonstrate the dramatic effects of small surface tension on the late time
evolution of two-finger configurations with respect to exact (non-singular)
zero surface tension solutions. The effect is present even when the relevant
zero surface tension solution has asymptotic behavior consistent with selection
theory.Such singular effects therefore cannot be traced back to steady state
selection theory, and imply a drastic global change in the structure of
phase-space flow. They can be interpreted in the framework of a recently
introduced dynamical solvability scenario according to which surface tension
unfolds the structually unstable flow, restoring the hyperbolicity of
multifinger fixed points.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev
Supersymmetric sigma models and the 't Hooft instantons
Witten's linear sigma model for ADHM instantons possesses a natural
supersymmetry. We study generalizations of the infrared limit of the model that
are invariant under supersymmetry. In the case of four space-time
dimensions a background with a conformally flat metric and torsion is required.
The geometry is specified by a single real scalar function satisfying Laplace's
equation. It gives rise to 't Hooft instantons for the gauge group ,
instead of the general ADHM instantons for an gauge group in the case
.Comment: 11 pages, Latex fil
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