12,110 research outputs found
Killing spinors in supergravity with 4-fluxes
We study the spinorial Killing equation of supergravity involving a torsion
3-form \T as well as a flux 4-form \F. In dimension seven, we construct
explicit families of compact solutions out of 3-Sasakian geometries, nearly
parallel \G_2-geometries and on the homogeneous Aloff-Wallach space. The
constraint \F \cdot \Psi = 0 defines a non empty subfamily of solutions. We
investigate the constraint \T \cdot \Psi = 0, too, and show that it singles
out a very special choice of numerical parameters in the Killing equation,
which can also be justified geometrically
On the Ricci tensor in type II B string theory
Let be a metric connection with totally skew-symmetric torsion \T
on a Riemannian manifold. Given a spinor field and a dilaton function
, the basic equations in type II B string theory are \bdm \nabla \Psi =
0, \quad \delta(\T) = a \cdot \big(d \Phi \haken \T \big), \quad \T \cdot \Psi
= b \cdot d \Phi \cdot \Psi + \mu \cdot \Psi . \edm We derive some relations
between the length ||\T||^2 of the torsion form, the scalar curvature of
, the dilaton function and the parameters . The main
results deal with the divergence of the Ricci tensor \Ric^{\nabla} of the
connection. In particular, if the supersymmetry is non-trivial and if
the conditions \bdm (d \Phi \haken \T) \haken \T = 0, \quad \delta^{\nabla}(d
\T) \cdot \Psi = 0 \edm hold, then the energy-momentum tensor is
divergence-free. We show that the latter condition is satisfied in many
examples constructed out of special geometries. A special case is . Then
the divergence of the energy-momentum tensor vanishes if and only if one
condition \delta^{\nabla}(d \T) \cdot \Psi = 0 holds. Strong models (d \T =
0) have this property, but there are examples with \delta^{\nabla}(d \T) \neq
0 and \delta^{\nabla}(d \T) \cdot \Psi = 0.Comment: 9 pages, Latex2
General Relativistic Scalar Field Models in the Large
For a class of scalar fields including the massless Klein-Gordon field the
general relativistic hyperboloidal initial value problems are equivalent in a
certain sense. By using this equivalence and conformal techniques it is proven
that the hyperboloidal initial value problem for those scalar fields has an
unique solution which is weakly asymptotically flat. For data sufficiently
close to data for flat spacetime there exist a smooth future null infinity and
a regular future timelike infinity.Comment: 22 pages, latex, AGG 1
Law and History
Law is frozen history. In an elementary sense, everything we study when we study law is the report of an event in history, and all history consists of such records or reports. It therefore cannot be my task to develop a sermon on the importance of historical records for the understanding of the law; the tie is too intimate and too obvious to need laboring. The work of Professor Maine on \u27Ancient Law,\u27 wrote Professor T. W. Dwight in his Introduction to that book in the sixties of the last century, is almost the only one in the English language in which general jurisprudence is regarded from the historical point of view. \u27This is an astonishing statement, considering the strikingly historical pattern of the common law. It is possibly correct, if taken very precisely. But was not the work of Blackstone or the work of Coke general jurisprudence from the historical point of view? Was it not their preoccupation with history, with the past, which aroused Jeremy Bentham against the jurisprudence of Blackstone and his predecessors? Law cannot of course be identified with general jurisprudence in any case; but leaving that issue aside, English and American law appear in fact to be frozen history ; the institutions by which they are constituted are the outgrowth of that process which in Burke\u27s memorable phrase links the dead of the past with the generations yet unborn. But what of history? Is history conceivable without law? Certainly not the history of our western world, though there are civilizations, such as the Chinese during most of its existence, which have not placed law into such a central position. It is patent that neither medieval nor modern history can be written or understood without careful attention to legal institutions. From feudalism to capitalism,from Magna Carta to the constitutions of contemporary Europe, the historian encounters law at every turn as a decisive factor
A Method for Calculating the Structure of (Singular) Spacetimes in the Large
A formalism and its numerical implementation is presented which allows to
calculate quantities determining the spacetime structure in the large directly.
This is achieved by conformal techniques by which future null infinity
(\Scri{}^+) and future timelike infinity () are mapped to grid points on
the numerical grid. The determination of the causal structure of singularities,
the localization of event horizons, the extraction of radiation, and the
avoidance of unphysical reflections at the outer boundary of the grid, are
demonstrated with calculations of spherically symmetric models with a scalar
field as matter and radiation model.Comment: 29 pages, AGG2
Otto Stern (1888-1969): The founding father of experimental atomic physics
We review the work and life of Otto Stern who developed the molecular beam
technique and with its aid laid the foundations of experimental atomic physics.
Among the key results of his research are: the experimental determination of
the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution of molecular velocities (1920), experimental
demonstration of space quantization of angular momentum (1922), diffraction of
matter waves comprised of atoms and molecules by crystals (1931) and the
determination of the magnetic dipole moments of the proton and deuteron (1933).Comment: 39 pages, 8 figure
Efficient and spectrally bright source of polarization-entangled photons
We demonstrate an efficient fiber-coupled source of nondegenerate
polarization entangled photons at 795 and 1609 nm using bidirectionally pumped
parametric down-conversion in bulk periodically poled lithium niobate. The
single-mode source has an inferred bandwidth of 50 GHz and a spectral
brightness of 300 pairs/s/GHz/mW of pump power that is suitable for narrowband
applications such as entanglement transfer from photonic to atomic qubits.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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