3,330 research outputs found
The Cosmic Censor Forbids Naked Topology
For any asymptotically flat spacetime with a suitable causal structure
obeying (a weak form of) Penrose's cosmic censorship conjecture and satisfying
conditions guaranteeing focusing of complete null geodesics, we prove that
active topological censorship holds. We do not assume global hyperbolicity, and
therefore make no use of Cauchy surfaces and their topology. Instead, we
replace this with two underlying assumptions concerning the causal structure:
that no compact set can signal to arbitrarily small neighbourhoods of spatial
infinity (``-avoidance''), and that no future incomplete null geodesic is
visible from future null infinity. We show that these and the focusing
condition together imply that the domain of outer communications is simply
connected. Furthermore, we prove lemmas which have as a consequence that if a
future incomplete null geodesic were visible from infinity, then given our
-avoidance assumption, it would also be visible from points of spacetime
that can communicate with infinity, and so would signify a true naked
singularity.Comment: To appear in CQG, this improved version contains minor revisions to
incorporate referee's suggestions. Two revised references. Plain TeX, 12
page
A uniqueness theorem for the adS soliton
The stability of physical systems depends on the existence of a state of
least energy. In gravity, this is guaranteed by the positive energy theorem.
For topological reasons this fails for nonsupersymmetric Kaluza-Klein
compactifications, which can decay to arbitrarily negative energy. For related
reasons, this also fails for the AdS soliton, a globally static, asymptotically
toroidal spacetime with negative mass. Nonetheless, arguing from
the AdS/CFT correspondence, Horowitz and Myers (hep-th/9808079) proposed a new
positive energy conjecture, which asserts that the AdS soliton is the unique
state of least energy in its asymptotic class. We give a new structure theorem
for static spacetimes and use it to prove uniqueness of the AdS
soliton. Our results offer significant support for the new positive energy
conjecture and add to the body of rigorous results inspired by the AdS/CFT
correspondence.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages; Matches published version. More detail in Abstract
and one equation corrected. For details of proofs and further results, see
hep-th/020408
Non-Existence of Black Holes in Certain Spacetimes
Assuming certain asymptotic conditions, we prove a general theorem on the
non-existence of static regular (i.e., nondegenerate) black holes in spacetimes
with a negative cosmological constant, given that the fundamental group of
space is infinite. We use this to rule out the existence of regular negative
mass AdS black holes with Ricci flat scri. For any mass, we also rule out a
class of conformally compactifiable static black holes whose conformal infinity
has positive scalar curvature and infinite fundamental group, subject to our
asymptotic conditions. In a limited, but important, special case our result
adds new support to the AdS/CFT inspired positive mass conjecture of Horowitz
and Myers.Comment: 17 pages, Latex. Typos corrected, minor changes to the text. Accepted
for publication in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Puzzling thermonuclear burst behaviour from the transient low-mass X-ray binary IGR J17473-2721
We investigate the thermonuclear bursting behaviour of IGR J17473-2721, an
X-ray transient that in 2008 underwent a six month long outburst, starting
(unusually) with an X-ray burst. We detected a total of 57 thermonuclear bursts
throughout the outburst with AGILE, Swift, RXTE, and INTEGRAL. The wide range
of inferred accretion rates (between <1% and about 20% of the Eddington
accretion rate m-dot_Edd) spanned during the outburst allows us to study
changes in the nuclear burning processes and to identify up to seven different
phases. The burst rate increased gradually with the accretion rate until it
dropped (at a persistent flux corresponding to about 15% of m-dot_Edd) a few
days before the outburst peak, after which bursts were not detected for a
month. As the persistent emission subsequently decreased, the bursting activity
resumed with a much lower rate than during the outburst rise. This hysteresis
may arise from the thermal effect of the accretion on the surface nuclear
burning processes, and the timescale is roughly consistent with that expected
for the neutron star crust thermal response. On the other hand, an undetected
superburst, occurring within a data gap near the outburst peak, could have
produced a similar quenching of burst activity.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Summary of the recent short-haul systems studies
The results of several NASA sponsored high density short haul air transportation systems studies are reported as well as analyzed. Included are the total STOL systems analysis approach, a companion STOL composites study conducted in conjunction with STOL systems studies, a STOL economic assessment study, an evaluation of STOL aircraft with and without externally blown flaps, an alternative STOL systems for the San Francisco Bay Area, and the quiet, clean experimental engine studies. Assumptions and results of these studies are summarized, their differences, analyzed, and the results compared with those in-house analyses performed by the Systems Studies Division of the NASA-Ames Research Center. Pertinent conclusions are developed and the more significant technology needs for the evaluation of a viable short haul transportation system are identified
Reconsidering "the love of art" : evaluating the potential of art museum outreach
Art museums have long been identified as bastions of social and cultural exclusion. This conclusion was best evidenced by the large-scale 1967 French study by Bourdieu and Darbel demonstrating the exclusionary nature of “The Love of Art.” However, in recent years there have been increasing efforts to reach out to a broader range of visitors beyond conventional
audiences. The present study investigates the impacts of an outreach program at a UK art museum, which sought to engage socially excluded young mothers. This study employs ethnographic research methods on a longitudinal basis to develop qualitative insights about the program seeking to mitigate cultural exclusion. While the study’s findings uphold many longstanding critiques of art museums’ conventional approaches, the study also indicates that carefully designed outreach activities can overcome such limitations and enhance cultural
engagement. Thus, art museums’ limited appeal is tied to problematic public engagement practices that can be changed
Gravity Dual of Gauge Theory on S^2 x S^1 x R
We (numerically) construct new static, asymptotically AdS solutions where the
conformal infinity is the product of time and S^2 x S^1. There always exist a
family of solutions in which the S^1 is not contractible and, for small S^1,
there are two additional families of solutions in which the S^1 smoothly
pinches off. This shows that (when fermions are antiperiodic around the S^1)
there is a quantum phase transition in the gauge theory as one decreases the
radius of the S^1 relative to the S^2. We also compare the masses of our
solutions and argue that the one with lowest mass should minimize the energy
among all solutions with conformal boundary S^2 x S^1 x R. This provides a new
positive energy conjecture for asymptotically locally AdS metrics. A simple
analytic continuation produces AdS black holes with topology S^2 x S^1.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, v2: minor changes, added reference
- …