496 research outputs found
The Universal Kaehler Modulus in Warped Compactifications
We construct the effective theory of the universal Kaehler modulus in warped
compactifications using the Hamiltonian formulation of general relativity. The
spacetime dependent 10d solution is constructed at the linear level for both
the volume modulus and its axionic partner, and nontrivial cancellations of
warping effects are found in the dimensional reduction. Our main result is that
the Kaehler potential is not corrected by warping, up to an overall shift in
the background value of the volume modulus. We extend the analysis beyond the
linearized approximation by computing the fully backreacted 10d metric
corresponding to a finite volume modulus fluctuation. Also, we discuss the
behavior of the modulus in strongly warped regions and show that there are no
mixings with light Kaluza-Klein modes. These results are important for the
phenomenology and cosmology of flux compactifications.Comment: 28 pages, 1 figure; v2. corrected typos, added refs & minor
clarification
Warped Kaluza-Klein Dark Matter
Warped compactifications of type IIB string theory contain natural dark
matter candidates: Kaluza-Klein modes along approximate isometry directions of
long warped throats. These isometries are broken by the full compactification,
including moduli stabilization; we present a thorough survey of Kaluza-Klein
mode decay rates into light supergravity modes and Standard Model particles. We
find that these dark matter candidates typically have lifetimes longer than the
age of the universe. Interestingly, some choices for embedding the Standard
Model in the compactification lead to decay rates large enough to be observed,
so this dark matter sector may provide constraints on the parameter space of
the compactification.Comment: 37pp; v2. references, minor clarificatio
Anticipatory eye movements evoked after active following versus passive observation of a predictable motion stimulus.
We used passive and active following of a predictable smooth pursuit stimulus in order to establish if predictive eye movement responses are equivalent under both passive and active conditions. The smooth pursuit stimulus was presented in pairs that were either ‘predictable’ in which both presentations were matched in timing and velocity, or ‘randomized’ in which each presentation in the pair was varied in both timing and velocity. A visual cue signaled the type of response required from the subject; a green cue indicated the subject should follow both the target presentations (Go-Go), a pink cue indicated that the subject should passively observe the 1st target and follow the 2nd target (NoGo-Go), and finally a green cue with a black cross revealed a randomized (Rnd) trial in which the subject should follow both presentations. The results revealed better prediction in the Go-Go trials than in the NoGo-Go trials, as indicated by higher anticipatory velocity and earlier eye movement onset (latency). We conclude that velocity and timing information stored from passive observation of a moving target is diminished when compared to active following of the target. This study has significant consequences for understanding how visuomotor memory is generated, stored and subsequently released from short-term memory
Turning to God in the Face of Ostracism: Effects of Social Exclusion on Religiousness
The present research proposes that individuals who are socially excluded can turn to religion to cope with the experience. Empirical studies conducted to test this hypothesis consistently found that socially excluded persons reported (a) significantly higher levels of religious affiliation (Studies 1, 2, and 4) and (b) stronger intentions to engage in religious behaviors (Study 2) than comparable, nonexcluded individuals. Direct support for the stress-buffering function of religiousness was also found, with a religious prime reducing the aggression-eliciting effects of consequent social rejection (Study 5). These effects were observed in both Christian and Muslim samples, revealing that turning to religion can be a powerful coping response when dealing with social rejection. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed
Dynamics of intersecting brane systems -- Classification and their applications --
We present dynamical intersecting brane solutions in higher-dimensional
gravitational theory coupled to dilaton and several forms. Assuming the forms
of metric, form fields, and dilaton field, we give a complete classification of
dynamical intersecting brane solutions with/without M-waves and Kaluza-Klein
monopoles in eleven-dimensional supergravity. We apply these solutions to
cosmology and black holes. It is shown that these give FRW cosmological
solutions and in some cases Lorentz invariance is broken in our world. If we
regard the bulk space as our universe, we may interpret them as black holes in
the expanding universe. We also discuss lower-dimensional effective theories
and point out naive effective theories may give us some solutions which are
inconsistent with the higher-dimensional Einstein equations.Comment: 44 pages; v2: minor corrections, references adde
Calabi-Yau Duals of Torus Orientifolds
We study a duality that relates the T^6/Z_2 orientifold with N=2 flux to
standard fluxless Calabi-Yau compactifications of type IIA string theory. Using
the duality map, we show that the Calabi-Yau manifolds that arise are abelian
surface (T^4) fibrations over P^1. We compute a variety of properties of these
threefolds, including Hodge numbers, intersection numbers, discrete isometries,
and H_1(X,Z). In addition, we show that S-duality in the orientifold
description becomes T-duality of the abelian surface fibers in the dual
Calabi-Yau description. The analysis is facilitated by the existence of an
explicit Calabi-Yau metric on an open subset of the geometry that becomes an
arbitrarily good approximation to the actual metric (at most points) in the
limit that the fiber is much smaller than the base.Comment: 39 pages; uses harvmac.tex, amssym.tex; v4: minor correction
Gaugino Condensation and Nonperturbative Superpotentials in Flux Compactifications
There are two known sources of nonperturbative superpotentials for K\"ahler
moduli in type IIB orientifolds, or F-theory compactifications on Calabi-Yau
fourfolds, with flux: Euclidean brane instantons and low-energy dynamics in D7
brane gauge theories. The first class of effects, Euclidean D3 branes which
lift in M-theory to M5 branes wrapping divisors of arithmetic genus 1 in the
fourfold, is relatively well understood. The second class has been less
explored. In this paper, we consider the explicit example of F-theory on with flux. The fluxes lift the D7 brane matter fields, and stabilize
stacks of D7 branes at loci of enhanced gauge symmetry. The resulting theories
exhibit gaugino condensation, and generate a nonperturbative superpotential for
K\"ahler moduli. We describe how the relevant geometries in general contain
cycles of arithmetic genus (and how divisors can
contribute to the superpotential, in the presence of flux). This second class
of effects is likely to be important in finding even larger classes of models
where the KKLT mechanism of moduli stabilization can be realized. We also
address various claims about the situation for IIB models with a single
K\"ahler modulus.Comment: 24 pages, harvmac, no figures, references adde
The Giant Inflaton
We investigate a new mechanism for realizing slow roll inflation in string
theory, based on the dynamics of p anti-D3 branes in a class of mildly warped
flux compactifications. Attracted to the bottom of a warped conifold throat,
the anti-branes then cluster due to a novel mechanism wherein the background
flux polarizes in an attempt to screen them. Once they are sufficiently close,
the M units of flux cause the anti-branes to expand into a fuzzy NS5-brane,
which for rather generic choices of p/M will unwrap around the geometry,
decaying into D3-branes via a classical process. We find that the effective
potential governing this evolution possesses several epochs that can
potentially support slow-roll inflation, provided the process can be arranged
to take place at a high enough energy scale, of about one or two orders of
magnitude below the Planck energy; this scale, however, lies just outside the
bounds of our approximations.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX. v2: references added, typos fixe
Open String Wavefunctions in Warped Compactifications
We analyze the wavefunctions for open strings in warped compactifications,
and compute the warped Kahler potential for the light modes of a probe D-brane.
This analysis not only applies to the dynamics of D-branes in warped
backgrounds, but also allows to deduce warping corrections to the closed string
Kahler metrics via their couplings to open strings. We consider in particular
the spectrum of D7-branes in warped Calabi-Yau orientifolds, which provide a
string theory realizations of the Randall-Sundrum scenario. We find that
certain background fluxes, necessary in the presence of warping, couple to the
fermionic wavefunctions and qualitatively change their behavior. This modified
dependence of the wavefunctions are needed for consistency with supersymmetry,
though it is present in non-supersymmetric vacua as well. We discuss the
deviations of our setup from the RS scenario and, as an application of our
results, compute the warping corrections to Yukawa couplings in a simple model.
Our analysis is performed both with and without the presence of D-brane
world-volume flux, as well as for the case of backgrounds with varying dilaton.Comment: 52 pages, refs. added, minor correction
Predictors of care-giver stress in families of preschool-aged children with developmental disabilities
Background This study examined the predictors, mediators and moderators of parent stress in families of preschool-aged children with developmental disability. Method One hundred and five mothers of preschool-aged children with developmental disability completed assessment measures addressing the key variables. Results Analyses demonstrated that the difficulty parents experienced in completing specific caregiving tasks, behaviour problems during these caregiving tasks, and level of child disability, respectively, were significant predictors of level of parent stress. In addition, parents’ cognitive appraisal of care-giving responsibilities had a mediating effect on the relationship between the child’s level of disability and parent stress. Mothers’ level of social support had a moderating effect on the relationship between key independent variables and level of parent stress. Conclusions Difficulty of care-giving tasks, difficult child behaviour during care-giving tasks, and level of child disability are the primary factors which contribute to parent stress. Implications of these findings for future research and clinical practice are outlined
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