7,300 research outputs found
Stability of flux vacua in the presence of charged black holes
In this letter we consider a charged black hole in a flux compactification of
type IIB string theory. Both the black hole and the fluxes will induce
potentials for the complex structure moduli. We choose the compact dimensions
to be described locally by a deformed conifold, creating a large hierarchy. We
demonstrate that the presence of a black hole typically will not change the
minimum of the moduli potential in a substantial way. However, we also point
out a couple of possible loop-holes, which in some cases could lead to
interesting physical consequences such as changes in the hierarchy.Comment: 14 pages. Published versio
An Email Attachment is Worth a Thousand Words, or Is It?
There is an extensive body of research on Social Network Analysis (SNA) based
on the email archive. The network used in the analysis is generally extracted
either by capturing the email communication in From, To, Cc and Bcc email
header fields or by the entities contained in the email message. In the latter
case, the entities could be, for instance, the bag of words, url's, names,
phones, etc. It could also include the textual content of attachments, for
instance Microsoft Word documents, excel spreadsheets, or Adobe pdfs. The nodes
in this network represent users and entities. The edges represent communication
between users and relations to the entities. We suggest taking a different
approach to the network extraction and use attachments shared between users as
the edges. The motivation for this is two-fold. First, attachments represent
the "intimacy" manifestation of the relation's strength. Second, the
statistical analysis of private email archives that we collected and Enron
email corpus shows that the attachments contribute in average around 80-90% to
the archive's disk-space usage, which means that most of the data is presently
ignored in the SNA of email archives. Consequently, we hypothesize that this
approach might provide more insight into the social structure of the email
archive. We extract the communication and shared attachments networks from
Enron email corpus. We further analyze degree, betweenness, closeness, and
eigenvector centrality measures in both networks and review the differences and
what can be learned from them. We use nearest neighbor algorithm to generate
similarity groups for five Enron employees. The groups are consistent with
Enron's organizational chart, which validates our approach.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 7 tables, IML'17, Liverpool, U
Dynamics of Diblock Copolymers in Dilute Solutions
We consider the dynamics of freely translating and rotating diblock (A-B),
Gaussian copolymers, in dilute solutions. Using the multiple scattering
technique, we have computed the diffusion and the friction coefficients D_AB
and Zeta_AB, and the change Eta_AB in the viscosity of the solution as
functions of x = N_A/N and t = l_B/l_A, where N_A, N are the number of segments
of the A block and of the whole copolymer, respectively, and l_A, l_B are the
Kuhn lengths of the A and B blocks. Specific regimes that maximize the
efficiency of separation of copolymers with distinct "t" values, have been
identified.Comment: 20 pages Revtex, 7 eps figures, needs epsf.tex and amssymb.sty,
submitted to Macromolecule
A Large k Asymptotics of Witten's Invariant of Seifert Manifolds
We calculate a large asymptotic expansion of the exact surgery formula
for Witten's invariant of Seifert manifolds. The contributions of all
flat connections are identified. An agreement with the 1-loop formula is
checked. A contribution of the irreducible connections appears to contain only
a finite number of terms in the asymptotic series. A 2-loop correction to the
contribution of the trivial connection is found to be proportional to Casson's
invariant.Comment: 51 pages (Some changes are made to the Discussion section. A surgery
formula for perturbative corrections to the contribution of the trivial
connection is suggested.
Geometric Aspects of D-branes and T-duality
We explore the differential geometry of T-duality and D-branes. Because
D-branes and RR-fields are properly described via K-theory, we discuss the
(differential) K-theoretic generalization of T-duality and its application to
the coupling of D-branes to RR-fields. This leads to a puzzle involving the
transformation of the A-roof genera in the coupling.Comment: 26 pages, JHEP format, uses dcpic.sty; v2: references added, v3:
minor change
Non-Abelian Chern-Simons models with discrete gauge groups on a lattice
We construct the local Hamiltonian description of the Chern-Simons theory
with discrete non-Abelian gauge group on a lattice. We show that the theory is
fully determined by the phase factors associated with gauge transformations and
classify all possible non-equivalent phase factors. We also construct the gauge
invariant electric field operators that move fluxons around and
create/anihilate them. We compute the resulting braiding properties of the
fluxons. We apply our general results to the simplest class of non-Abelian
groups, dihedral groups D_n.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Surface Polymer Network Model and Effective Membrane Curvature Elasticity
A microscopic model of a surface polymer network - membrane system is
introduced, with contact polymer surface interactions that can be either
repulsive or attractive and sliplinks of functionality four randomly
distributed over the supporting membrane surface anchoring the polymers to it.
For the supporting surface perturbed from a planar configuration and a small
relative number of surface sliplinks, we investigate an expansion of the free
energy in terms of the local curvatures of the surface and the surface density
of sliplinks, obtained through the application of the Balian - Bloch -
Duplantier multiple surface scattering method. As a result, the dependence of
the curvature elastic modulus, the Gaussian modulus as well as of the
spontaneous curvature of the "dressed" membrane, ~{\sl i.e.} polymer network
plus membrane matrix, is obtained on the mean polymer bulk end to end
separation and the surface density of sliplinks.Comment: 15 pages with one included compressed uuencoded figure
Retroviruses 2004: Review of the 2004 Cold Spring Harbor Retroviruses conference
For the past several decades, retrovirologists from around the world have gathered in late May at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories in New York to present their studies in formal talks and posters, and to discuss their ongoing research informally at the bar or on the beach. As organizers of the 2004 Cold Spring Harbor Retroviruses Conference, we have been asked by the editors of Retrovirology to prepare a review of the meeting for publication on-line. Our goal in this review is not to provide a detailed description of data presented at the meeting but rather to highlight some of the significant developments reported this year. The review is structured in a manner that parallels the organization of the meeting; beginning with the entry phase of the replication cycle, proceeding with post-entry events, assembly and release, integration, reverse transcription, pathogenesis/host factors, RNA-related events (transcription, processing, export, and packaging) and finishing with antivirals. While the most striking developments this year involved post-entry events and assembly/release, significant progress was made towards elucidating a number of aspects of the retroviral replication cycle
A Note on the Equality of Algebraic and Geometric D-Brane Charges in WZW Models
The algebraic definition of charges for symmetry-preserving D-branes in
Wess-Zumino-Witten models is shown to coincide with the geometric definition,
for all simple Lie groups. The charge group for such branes is computed from
the ambiguities inherent in the geometric definition.Comment: 12 pages, fixed typos, added references and a couple of remark
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