1,353 research outputs found
Sum rules and three point functions
Sum rules constraining the R-current spectral densities are derived
holographically for the case of D3-branes, M2-branes and M5-branes all at
finite chemical potentials. In each of the cases the sum rule relates a certain
integral of the spectral density over the frequency to terms which depend both
on long distance physics, hydrodynamics and short distance physics of the
theory. The terms which which depend on the short distance physics result from
the presence of certain chiral primaries in the OPE of two R-currents which are
turned on at finite chemical potential. Since these sum rules contain
information of the OPE they provide an alternate method to obtain the structure
constants of the two R-currents and the chiral primary. As a consistency check
we show that the 3 point function derived from the sum rule precisely matches
with that obtained using Witten diagrams.Comment: 41 page
Global entanglement in multiparticle systems
We define a polynomial measure of multiparticle entanglement which is
scalable, i.e., which applies to any number of spin-1/2 particles. By
evaluating it for three particle states, for eigenstates of the one dimensional
Heisenberg antiferromagnet and on quantum error correcting code subspaces, we
illustrate the extent to which it quantifies global entanglement. We also apply
it to track the evolution of entanglement during a quantum computation.Comment: 9 pages, plain TeX, 1 PostScript figure included with epsf.tex
(ignore the under/overfull \vbox error messages); for related work see
http://math.ucsd.edu/~dmeyer/research.html or
http://www.math.ucsd.edu/~nwallach
Kaluza-Klein supergravity on AdS_3 x S^3
We construct a Chern-Simons type gauged N=8 supergravity in three spacetime
dimensions with gauge group SO(4) x T_\infty over the infinite dimensional
coset space SO(8,\infty)/(SO(8) x SO(\infty)), where T_\infty is an infinite
dimensional translation subgroup of SO(8,\infty). This theory describes the
effective interactions of the (infinitely many) supermultiplets contained in
the two spin-1 Kaluza-Klein towers arising in the compactification of N=(2,0)
supergravity in six dimensions on AdS_3 x S^3 with the massless supergravity
multiplet. After the elimination of the gauge fields associated with T_\infty,
one is left with a Yang Mills type gauged supergravity with gauge group SO(4),
and in the vacuum the symmetry is broken to the (super-)isometry group of AdS_3
x S^3, with infinitely many fields acquiring masses by a variant of the
Brout-Englert-Higgs effect.Comment: LaTeX2e, 24 pages; v2: references update
A Spectroscopic Binary at the M/L Transition
We report the discovery of a single-lined spectroscopic binary with an Ultra
Cool Dwarf (UCD) primary with a spectral type between M8 and L0.5. This system
was discovered during the course of an ongoing survey to monitor L dwarfs for
radial velocity variations and is the first known small separation (a<1 AU)
spectroscopic binary among dwarfs at the M/L transition. Based on
radial-velocity measurements with a typical precision of 300 m/s we estimate
the orbital parameters of this system to be P=246.73+/-0.49 d, a1
sin(i)=0.159+/-0.003 AU, M2 sin(i)=0.2062 (M1+M2)^(2/3)+/-0.0034 M_{\sun}.
Assuming a primary mass of M1=0.08M_{\sun} (based on spectral type), we
estimate the secondary minimum mass to be M2 sin(i)=0.054 M_{\sun}. With future
photometric, spectroscopic, and interferometric observations it may be possible
to determine the dynamical masses of both components directly, making this
system one of the best characterized UCD binaries known.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Sex and Gender Differences in Travel-Associated Disease
Background. No systematic studies exist on sex and gender differences across a broad range of travel-associated diseases. Methods. Travel and tropical medicine GeoSentinel clinics worldwide contributed prospective, standardized data on 58,908 patients with travel-associated illness to a central database from 1 March 1997 through 31 October 2007. We evaluated sex and gender differences in health outcomes and in demographic characteristics. Statistical significance for crude analysis of dichotomous variables was determined using hi; 2 tests with calculation of odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). The main outcome measure was proportionate morbidity of specific diagnoses in men and women. The analyses were adjusted for age, travel duration, pretravel encounter, reason for travel, and geographical region visited. Results. We found statistically significant (Pµ.001) differences in morbidity by sex. Women are proportionately more likely than men to present with acute diarrhea (OR, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.09-1.38), chronic diarrhea (OR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.19-1.37), irritable bowel syndrome (OR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.24-1.57), upper respiratory tract infection (OR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.14-1.33); urinary tract infection (OR, 4.01; 95% CI, 3.34-4.71), psychological stressors (OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.14-1.48), oral and dental conditions, or adverse reactions to medication. Women are proportionately less likely to have febrile illnesses (OR, 0.15; 95% CI, 0.10-0.21); vector-borne diseases, such as malaria (OR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.41-0.51), leishmaniasis, or rickettsioses (OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.43-0.74); sexually transmitted infections (OR, 0.68; 95% CI 0.58-0.81); viral hepatitis (OR, 0.34; 95% CI, 0.21-0.54); or noninfectious problems, including cardiovascular disease, acute mountain sickness, and frostbite. Women are statistically significantly more likely to obtain pretravel advice (OR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.23-1.32), and ill female travelers are less likely than ill male travelers to be hospitalized (OR, 0.45; 95% CI, 0.42-0.49). Conclusions. Men and women present with different profiles of travel-related morbidity. Preventive travel medicine and future travel medicine research need to address gender-specific intervention strategies and differential susceptibility to diseas
Finite precision measurement nullifies the Kochen-Specker theorem
Only finite precision measurements are experimentally reasonable, and they
cannot distinguish a dense subset from its closure. We show that the rational
vectors, which are dense in S^2, can be colored so that the contradiction with
hidden variable theories provided by Kochen-Specker constructions does not
obtain. Thus, in contrast to violation of the Bell inequalities, no
quantum-over-classical advantage for information processing can be derived from
the Kochen-Specker theorem alone.Comment: 7 pages, plain TeX; minor corrections, interpretation clarified,
references update
Observational constraints on the spectral index of the cosmological curvature perturbation
We evaluate the observational constraints on the spectral index , in the
context of the CDM hypothesis which represents the simplest viable
cosmology. We first take to be practically scale-independent. Ignoring
reionization, we find at a nominal 2- level . If
we make the more realisitic assumption that reionization occurs when a fraction
to 1 of the matter has collapsed, the 2- lower bound is
unchanged while the 1- bound rises slightly. These constraints are
compared with the prediction of various inflation models. Then we investigate
the two-parameter scale-dependent spectral index, predicted by running-mass
inflation models, and find that present data allow significant scale-dependence
of , which occurs in a physically reasonable regime of parameter space.Comment: ReVTeX, 15 pages, 5 figures and 3 tables, uses epsf.sty Improved
treatment of reionization and small bug fixed in the constant n case; more
convenient parameterization and better treatment of the n dependence in the
CMB anisotropy for the running mass case; conclusions basically unchanged;
references adde
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