732 research outputs found
Causal Fermion Systems: A Quantum Space-Time Emerging from an Action Principle
Causal fermion systems are introduced as a general mathematical framework for
formulating relativistic quantum theory. By specializing, we recover earlier
notions like fermion systems in discrete space-time, the fermionic projector
and causal variational principles. We review how an effect of spontaneous
structure formation gives rise to a topology and a causal structure in
space-time. Moreover, we outline how to construct a spin connection and
curvature, leading to a proposal for a "quantum geometry" in the Lorentzian
setting. We review recent numerical and analytical results on the support of
minimizers of causal variational principles which reveal a "quantization
effect" resulting in a discreteness of space-time. A brief survey is given on
the correspondence to quantum field theory and gauge theories.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, footnote added on page
Gravity and Matter in Causal Set Theory
The goal of this paper is to propose an approach to the formulation of
dynamics for causal sets and coupled matter fields. We start from the continuum
version of the action for a Klein-Gordon field coupled to gravity, and rewrite
it first using quantities that have a direct correspondent in the case of a
causal set, namely volumes, causal relations, and timelike lengths, as
variables to describe the geometry. In this step, the local Lagrangian density
for a set of fields is recast into a quasilocal expression
that depends on pairs of causally related points and
is a function of the values of in the Alexandrov set defined by those
points, and whose limit as and approach a common point is .
We then describe how to discretize , and use it to define a
discrete action.Comment: 13 pages, no figures; In version 2, friendlier results than in
version 1 are obtained following much shorter derivation
From Discrete Space-Time to Minkowski Space: Basic Mechanisms, Methods and Perspectives
This survey article reviews recent results on fermion system in discrete
space-time and corresponding systems in Minkowski space. After a basic
introduction to the discrete setting, we explain a mechanism of spontaneous
symmetry breaking which leads to the emergence of a discrete causal structure.
As methods to study the transition between discrete space-time and Minkowski
space, we describe a lattice model for a static and isotropic space-time,
outline the analysis of regularization tails of vacuum Dirac sea
configurations, and introduce a Lorentz invariant action for the masses of the
Dirac seas. We mention the method of the continuum limit, which allows to
analyze interacting systems. Open problems are discussed.Comment: 25 pages, LaTeX, 6 figures, minor improvements (published version
Network Cosmology
Prediction and control of the dynamics of complex networks is a central
problem in network science. Structural and dynamical similarities of different
real networks suggest that some universal laws might accurately describe the
dynamics of these networks, albeit the nature and common origin of such laws
remain elusive. Here we show that the causal network representing the
large-scale structure of spacetime in our accelerating universe is a power-law
graph with strong clustering, similar to many complex networks such as the
Internet, social, or biological networks. We prove that this structural
similarity is a consequence of the asymptotic equivalence between the
large-scale growth dynamics of complex networks and causal networks. This
equivalence suggests that unexpectedly similar laws govern the dynamics of
complex networks and spacetime in the universe, with implications to network
science and cosmology
The moduli space of isometry classes of globally hyperbolic spacetimes
This is the last article in a series of three initiated by the second author.
We elaborate on the concepts and theorems constructed in the previous articles.
In particular, we prove that the GH and the GGH uniformities previously
introduced on the moduli space of isometry classes of globally hyperbolic
spacetimes are different, but the Cauchy sequences which give rise to
well-defined limit spaces coincide. We then examine properties of the strong
metric introduced earlier on each spacetime, and answer some questions
concerning causality of limit spaces. Progress is made towards a general
definition of causality, and it is proven that the GGH limit of a Cauchy
sequence of , path metric Lorentz spaces is again a
, path metric Lorentz space. Finally, we give a
necessary and sufficient condition, similar to the one of Gromov for the
Riemannian case, for a class of Lorentz spaces to be precompact.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Class. Quant. Gra
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Polyethylene bio-degradation by caterpillars of the wax moth Galleria mellonella
Plastics are synthetic polymers derived from fossil oil and largely resistant to biodegradation. Polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) represent ∼92% of total plastic production. PE is largely utilized in packaging, representing ∼40% of total demand for plastic products (www.plasticseurope.org) with over a trillion plastic bags used every year [1]. Plastic production has increased exponentially in the past 50 years (Figure S1A in Supplemental Information, published with this article online). In the 27 EU countries plus Norway and Switzerland up to 38% of plastic is discarded in landfills, with the rest utilized for recycling (26%) and energy recovery (36%) via combustion (www.plasticseurope.org), carrying a heavy environmental impact. Therefore, new solutions for plastic degradation are urgently needed. We report the fast bio-degradation of PE by larvae of the wax moth Galleria mellonella, producing ethylene glycol.F.B. is a Ramon y Cajal Fellow at the IBBTEC, in Santander, Spain. We thank Dr. Simone Ruggeri and Dr. Jenny Zhang for technical help. This work was funded by the Leverhulme foundation. P.B. and F.B. are co-founders of the company Baky.ltd. The authors declare no competing interest
Extended cardiolipin anchorage to cytochrome c: model for protein-mitochondrial membrane binding.
Two models have been proposed to explain the interaction of cytochrome c with cardiolipin (CL) vesicles. In one case, an acyl chain of the phospholipid accommodates into a hydrophobic channel of the protein located close the Asn52 residue, whereas the alternative model considers the insertion of the acyl chain in the region of the Met80-containing loop. In an attempt to clarify which proposal offers a more appropriate explanation of cytochrome c-CL binding, we have undertaken a spectroscopic and kinetic study of the wild type and the Asn52Ile mutant of iso-1-cytochrome c from yeast to investigate the interaction of cytochrome c with CL vesicles, considered here a model for the CL-containing mitochondrial membrane. Replacement of Asn52, an invariant residue located in a small helix segment of the protein, may provide data useful to gain novel information on which region of cytochrome c is involved in the binding reaction with CL vesicles. In agreement with our recent results revealing that two distinct transitions take place in the cytochrome c-CL binding reaction, data obtained here support a model in which two (instead of one, as considered so far) adjacent acyl chains of the liposome are inserted, one at each of the hydrophobic sites, into the same cytochrome c molecule to form the cytochrome c-CL complex
A numerical study of the correspondence between paths in a causal set and geodesics in the continuum
This paper presents the results of a computational study related to the
path-geodesic correspondence in causal sets. For intervals in flat spacetimes,
and in selected curved spacetimes, we present evidence that the longest maximal
chains (the longest paths) in the corresponding causal set intervals
statistically approach the geodesic for that interval in the appropriate
continuum limit.Comment: To the celebration of the 60th birthday of Rafael D. Sorki
Nonperturbative dynamics for abstract (p,q) string networks
We describe abstract (p,q) string networks which are the string networks of
Sen without the information about their embedding in a background spacetime.
The non-perturbative dynamical formulation invented for spin networks, in terms
of causal evolution of dual triangulations, is applied to them. The formal
transition amplitudes are sums over discrete causal histories that evolve (p,q)
string networks. The dynamics depend on two free SL(2,Z) invariant functions
which describe the amplitudes for the local evolution moves.Comment: Latex, 12 pages, epsfig, 7 figures, minor change
Relationships between various characterisations of wave tails
One can define several properties of wave equations that correspond to the
absence of tails in their solutions, the most common one by far being Huygens'
principle. Not all of these definitions are equivalent, although they are
sometimes assumed to be. We analyse this issue in detail for linear scalar
waves, establishing some relationships between the various properties. Huygens'
principle is almost always equivalent to the characteristic propagation
property, and in two spacetime dimensions the latter is equivalent to the
zeroth order progressing wave propagation property. Higher order progressing
waves in general do have tails, and do not seem to admit a simple physical
characterisation, but they are nevertheless useful because of their close
association with exactly solvable two-dimensional equations.Comment: Plain TeX, 26 page
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