2,412 research outputs found

    Exotic galilean symmetry and the Hall effect

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    The ``Laughlin'' picture of the Fractional Quantum Hall effect can be derived using the ``exotic'' model based on the two-fold centrally-extended planar Galilei group. When coupled to a planar magnetic field of critical strength determined by the extension parameters, the system becomes singular, and ``Faddeev-Jackiw'' reduction yields the ``Chern-Simons'' mechanics of Dunne, Jackiw, and Trugenberger. The reduced system moves according to the Hall law.Comment: Talk given by P. A. Horvathy at the Joint APCTP- Nankai Symposium. Tianjin (China), Oct.2001. To appear in the Proceedings, to be published by Int. Journ. Mod. Phys. B. 7 pages, LaTex, IJMPB format. no figure

    An alternative well-posedness property and static spacetimes with naked singularities

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    In the first part of this paper, we show that the Cauchy problem for wave propagation in some static spacetimes presenting a singular time-like boundary is well posed, if we only demand the waves to have finite energy, although no boundary condition is required. This feature does not come from essential self-adjointness, which is false in these cases, but from a different phenomenon that we call the alternative well-posedness property, whose origin is due to the degeneracy of the metric components near the boundary. Beyond these examples, in the second part, we characterize the type of degeneracy which leads to this phenomenon.Comment: 34 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Class. Quantum Gra

    Motion and Trajectories of Particles Around Three-Dimensional Black Holes

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    The motion of relativistic particles around three dimensional black holes following the Hamilton-Jacobi formalism is studied. It follows that the Hamilton-Jacobi equation can be separated and reduced to quadratures in analogy with the four dimensional case. It is shown that: a) particles are trapped by the black hole independently of their energy and angular momentum, b) matter alway falls to the centre of the black hole and cannot understake a motion with stables orbits as in four dimensions. For the extreme values of the angular momentum of the black hole, we were able to find exact solutions of the equations of motion and trajectories of a test particle.Comment: Plain TeX, 9pp, IPNO-TH 93/06, DFTUZ 93/0

    The Landau problem and noncommutative quantum mechanics

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    The conditions under which noncommutative quantum mechanics and the Landau problem are equivalent theories is explored. If the potential in noncommutative quantum mechanics is chosen as V=Ω℔V= \Omega \aleph with â„”\aleph defined in the text, then for the value Ξ~=0.22×10−11cm2{\tilde \theta} = 0.22 \times 10^{-11} cm^2 (that measures the noncommutative effects of the space), the Landau problem and noncommutative quantum mechanics are equivalent theories in the lowest Landau level. For other systems one can find differents values for Ξ~{\tilde \theta} and, therefore, the possible bounds for Ξ~{\tilde \theta} should be searched in a physical independent scenario. This last fact could explain the differents bounds for Ξ~\tilde \theta found in the literature.Comment: This a rewritten and corrected version of our previous preprint hep-th/010517

    Determinants of Dirac operators with local boundary conditions

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    We study functional determinants for Dirac operators on manifolds with boundary. We give, for local boundary conditions, an explicit formula relating these determinants to the corresponding Green functions. We finally apply this result to the case of a bidimensional disk under bag-like conditions.Comment: standard LaTeX, 24 pages. To appear in Jour. Math. Phy

    Symmetry types of hyperelliptic Riemann surfaces

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    Let XX be a compact hyperelliptic Riemann surface which admits anti-analytic involutions (also called symmetries or real structures). For instance, a complex projective plane curve of genus two, defined by an equation with real coefficients, gives rise to such a surface, and complex conjugation is such a symmetry. In this memoir, the real structures τ\tau of XX are classified up to isomorphism (i.e., up to conjugation). This is done as follows: the number of connected components of the set of fixed points of τ\tau together with the connectedness or disconnectedness of the complementary set in XX classifies τ\tau topologically; they determine the species of τ\tau, which only depends on the conjugacy class of τ\tau (however, different conjugacy classes may have identical species). On these grounds, for a given genus g≄2g\ge2, the authors first give a list of all full groups of analytic and anti-analytic automorphisms of genus gg compact hyperelliptic Riemann surfaces. For every such group GG, the authors compute polynomial equations for a surface XX having GG as full group and then find the number of conjugacy classes containing symmetries; they also compute a representative τ\tau in every such class. Finally, they compute the species corresponding to such classes. This memoir is an exhaustive piece of work, going through a case-by-case analysis. The problem for general compact Riemann surfaces dates back to 1893, when {\it F. Klein} [Math. Ann. 42, 1--29 (1893)] first studied it. For zero genus, it is easy. For genus one, that is, for elliptic surfaces, it was solved by {\it N. Alling} ["Real elliptic curves" (1981)]. Partial results for hyperelliptic surfaces of genus two were obtained by {\it E. Bujalance} and {\it D. Singerman} [Proc. Lond. Math. Soc. 51, 501--519 (1985)]

    SU(2) Kinetic Mixing Terms and Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking

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    The non-abelian generalization of the Holdom model --{\it i.e.} a theory with two gauge fields coupled to the kinetic mixing term gtr(FΌΜ(A)FΌΜ(B))g {tr}(F_{\mu \nu} (A) F_{\mu \nu} (B))-- is considered. Contrarily to the abelian case, the group structure G×GG\times G is explicitly broken to GG. For SU(2) this fact implies that the residual gauge symmetry as well as the Lorentz symmetry is spontaneusly broken. We show that this mechanism provides of masses for the involved particles. Also, the model presents instanton solutions with a redefined coupling constant.Comment: 9pp. typos and clarifications are adde

    Aharonov-Casher effect for spin one particles in a noncommutative space

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    In this work the Aharonov-Casher (AC) phase is calculated for spin one particles in a noncommutative space. The AC phase has previously been calculated from the Dirac equation in a noncommutative space using a gauge-like technique [17]. In the spin-one, we use kemmer equation to calculate the phase in a similar manner. It is shown that the holonomy receives non-trivial kinematical corrections. By comparing the new result with the already known spin 1/2 case, one may conjecture a generalized formula for the corrections to holonomy for higher spins.Comment: 9 page

    Multi-Black-Holes in Three Dimensions

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    We construct time-dependent multi-centre solutions to three-dimensional general relativity with zero or negative cosmological constant. These solutions correspond to dynamical systems of freely falling black holes and conical singularities, with a multiply connected spacetime topology. Stationary multi-black-hole solutions are possible only in the extreme black hole case.Comment: 8 pages, \LaTex, 4 figures (available on request), GCR 94/02/0

    UV-B Radiation as a Factor that Deserves Further Research in Bolivian Viticulture: A Review

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    Bolivian viticulture has acquired an incipient notoriety in the international wine market due to theproduction of high-altitude wines with a high antioxidant potential. Andes agricultural regions presentan advantage for wine production since UV-B radiation reaching the earth’s surface increases withaltitude and varies with latitude, promoting the activation of plant defense mechanisms responsible forthe synthesis of secondary metabolites. UV‐B radiation upregulates the biosynthesis of nitrogen, phenolicand volatile compounds that contribute to wine flavour. It is thought that the incident UV-B radiationin the Bolivian valleys makes it possible to obtain wines with high phenolic and aromatic potential, butthe published results are not entirely conclusive. This manuscript addressed the geological and climaticfeatures that affect Bolivian viticulture, and we reviewed the field studies carried out regarding the effectsof altitude and UV-B radiation on flavour components of grapes and wines from Bolivian viticulturalvalleys. A high antioxidant capacity and trans-resveratrol content is found in grapes and wines from highaltitude Bolivian vineyards, including if they are compared to those samples from different wine countries.However, high UV-B radiation can result in bunch sunburn affecting some physico-chemical parameters ofthe produced wines. Scarce number of studies have been developed in this field despite this region presenta valuable potential for research in order to quantify the effects of biologically damaging radiation on thesynthesis of flavour components in grapes and some of them were not well scientifically controlled
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