1,737 research outputs found
Parallel Mean Curvature Surfaces in Symmetric Spaces
We present a reduction of codimension theorem for surfaces with parallel mean
curvature in symmetric spaces
The Cosmological Time Function
Let be a time oriented Lorentzian manifold and the Lorentzian
distance on . The function is the cosmological
time function of , where as usual means that is in the causal
past of . This function is called regular iff for all
and also along every past inextendible causal curve. If the
cosmological time function of a space time is regular it has
several pleasant consequences: (1) It forces to be globally hyperbolic,
(2) every point of can be connected to the initial singularity by a
rest curve (i.e., a timelike geodesic ray that maximizes the distance to the
singularity), (3) the function is a time function in the usual sense, in
particular (4) is continuous, in fact locally Lipschitz and the second
derivatives of exist almost everywhere.Comment: 19 pages, AEI preprint, latex2e with amsmath and amsth
Singularity theorems and the Lorentzian splitting theorem for the Bakry-Emery-Ricci tensor
We consider the Hawking-Penrose singularity theorems and the Lorentzian
splitting theorem under the weaker curvature condition of nonnegative
Bakry-Emery-Ricci curvature in timelike directions. We prove that
they still hold when is finite, and when is infinite, they hold under
the additional assumption that is bounded from above.Comment: Correction to one of the example
Compatibility of Gauss maps with metrics
We give necessary and sufficient conditions on a smooth local map of a
Riemannian manifold into the sphere to be the Gauss map of an
isometric immersion , . We briefly discuss the case of
general as wellComment: 14 pages, no figure
Rigid Singularity Theorem in Globally Hyperbolic Spacetimes
We show the rigid singularity theorem, that is, a globally hyperbolic
spacetime satisfying the strong energy condition and containing past trapped
sets, either is timelike geodesically incomplete or splits isometrically as
space time. This result is related to Yau's Lorentzian splitting
conjecture.Comment: 3 pages, uses revtex.sty, to appear in Physical Review
Uniqueness of static decompositions
We classify static manifolds which admit more than one static decomposition
whenever a condition on the curvature is fullfilled. For this, we take a
standard static vector field and analyze its associated one parameter family of
projections onto the base. We show that the base itself is a static manifold
and the warping function satisfies severe restrictions, leading us to our
classification results. Moreover, we show that certain condition on the
lightlike sectional curvature ensures the uniqueness of static decomposition
for Lorentzian manifolds.Comment: 14 page
Surgery and the Spectrum of the Dirac Operator
We show that for generic Riemannian metrics on a simply-connected closed spin
manifold of dimension at least 5 the dimension of the space of harmonic spinors
is no larger than it must be by the index theorem. The same result holds for
periodic fundamental groups of odd order.
The proof is based on a surgery theorem for the Dirac spectrum which says
that if one performs surgery of codimension at least 3 on a closed Riemannian
spin manifold, then the Dirac spectrum changes arbitrarily little provided the
metric on the manifold after surgery is chosen properly.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, to appear in J. Reine Angew. Mat
The index of symmetry of compact naturally reductive spaces
We introduce a geometric invariant that we call the index of symmetry, which measures how far is a Riemannian manifold from being a symmetric space. We compute, in a geometric way, the index of symmetry of compact naturally reductive spaces. In this case, the so-called leaf of symmetry turns out to be of the group type. We also study several examples where the leaf of symmetry is not of the group type. Interesting examples arise from the unit tangent bundle of the sphere of curvature 2, and two metrics in an Aloff-Wallach 7-manifold and the Wallach 24-manifold.submittedVersionFil: Olmos, Carlos Enrique. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Matemática, Astronomía y Física; Argentina.Fil: Reggiani, Silvio Nicolás. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Matemática, Astronomía y Física; Argentina.Fil: Tamuru, Hiroshi. Universidad de Hiroshima. Escuela de Ciencias. Departamento de Matemática; Japón.Matemática Pur
Crystal structure of the dynamin tetramer
The mechanochemical protein dynamin is the prototype of the dynamin superfamily of large GTPases, which shape and remodel membranes in diverse cellular processes. Dynamin forms predominantly tetramers in the cytosol, which oligomerize at the neck of clathrin-coated vesicles to mediate constriction and subsequent scission of the membrane. Previous studies have described the architecture of dynamin dimers, but the molecular determinants for dynamin assembly and its regulation have remained unclear. Here we present the crystal structure of the human dynamin tetramer in the nucleotide-free state. Combining structural data with mutational studies, oligomerization measurements and Markov state models of molecular dynamics simulations, we suggest a mechanism by which oligomerization of dynamin is linked to the release of intramolecular autoinhibitory interactions. We elucidate how mutations that interfere with tetramer formation and autoinhibition can lead to the congenital muscle disorders Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy and centronuclear myopathy, respectively. Notably, the bent shape of the tetramer explains how dynamin assembles into a right-handed helical oligomer of defined diameter, which has direct implications for its function in membrane constriction
Randomizing world trade. II. A weighted network analysis
Based on the misleading expectation that weighted network properties always
offer a more complete description than purely topological ones, current
economic models of the International Trade Network (ITN) generally aim at
explaining local weighted properties, not local binary ones. Here we complement
our analysis of the binary projections of the ITN by considering its weighted
representations. We show that, unlike the binary case, all possible weighted
representations of the ITN (directed/undirected, aggregated/disaggregated)
cannot be traced back to local country-specific properties, which are therefore
of limited informativeness. Our two papers show that traditional macroeconomic
approaches systematically fail to capture the key properties of the ITN. In the
binary case, they do not focus on the degree sequence and hence cannot
characterize or replicate higher-order properties. In the weighted case, they
generally focus on the strength sequence, but the knowledge of the latter is
not enough in order to understand or reproduce indirect effects.Comment: See also the companion paper (Part I): arXiv:1103.1243
[physics.soc-ph], published as Phys. Rev. E 84, 046117 (2011
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