2,355 research outputs found
p-brane superalgebras via integrability
It has long been appreciated that superalgebras with bosonic and fermionic
generators additional to those in the super-Poincare algebra underlie p-brane
and D-brane actions in superstring theory. These algebras have been revealed
via "bottom up" approaches, involving consideration of Noether charges, and by
"top down" approaches, involving the construction of manifestly supersymmetry
invariant Wess-Zumino actions. In this paper, we give an alternative derivation
of these algebras based on integrability of supersymmetry transformations
assigned to fields in order to solve a cohomology problem related to the
construction of Wess-Zumino terms for p-brane and D-brane actions.Comment: 22 pages, typo corrected, reference adde
Deriving all p-brane superalgebras via integrability
In previous work we demonstrated that the enlarged super-Poincare algebras
which underlie p-brane and D-brane actions in superstring theory can be
directly determined based on the integrability of supersymmetry transformations
assigned to fields appearing in Wess-Zumino terms. In that work we derived
p-brane superalgebras for p = 2 and 3. Here we extend our previous results and
give a compact expression for superalgebras for all valid p.Comment: 26 pages, table added, typos corrected, a few remarks added for
clarificatio
Constrained Simulations of the Magnetic Field in the Local Supercluster and the Propagation of UHECR
Magnetic fields (MF) in the Local Supercluster (LSC) of galaxies may have
profound consequences for the propagation of Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays
(UHECR). Faraday rotations measurements provide some informations about MF in
compact clusters. However, very few is known about less dense regions and about
the global structure of MF in the LSC. In order to get a better knowledge of
these fields we are performing constrained magnetohydrodynamical simulations of
the LSC magnetic field. We will present the results of our simulation and
discuss their implications for the angular distribution of expected UHECR
deflections.Comment: 4 pages + 1 figure. Published on the Proceedings of the 28th
International Cosmic Ray Conference, Tsukuba, Japan (2003
Heat transfer and wall temperature effects in shock wave turbulent boundary layer interactions
Direct numerical simulations are carried out to investigate the effect of the
wall temperature on the behavior of oblique shock-wave/turbulent boundary layer
interactions at freestream Mach number and shock angle of the wedge
generator . Five values of the
wall-to-recovery-temperature ratio () are considered, corresponding to
cold, adiabatic and hot wall thermal conditions. We show that the main effect
of cooling is to decrease the characteristic scales of the interaction in terms
of upstream influence and extent of the separation bubble. The opposite
behavior is observed in the case of heating, that produces a marked dilatation
of the interaction region. The distribution of the Stanton number shows that a
strong amplification of the heat transfer occurs across the interaction, and
the maximum values of thermal and dynamic loads are found in the case of cold
wall. The analysis reveals that the fluctuating heat flux exhibits a strong
intermittent behavior, characterized by scattered spots with extremely high
values compared to the mean. Furthermore, the analogy between momentum and heat
transfer, typical of compressible, wall-bounded, equilibrium turbulent flows
does not apply for most part of the interaction domain. The pre-multiplied
spectra of the wall heat flux do not show any evidence of the influence of the
low-frequency shock motion, and the primary mechanism for the generation of
peak heating is found to be linked with the turbulence amplification in the
interaction region.Comment: submitted to PRFluid
Cisternostomy for Traumatic Brain Injury: A New Era Begins
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of death and disability especially in the young generations. In the United States TBI affects about 1.7 million people annually [1] and this number is higher in the developing countries. It is well known that TBI is associated to a primary and secondary brain injury. The first is without solution and depends on the impact. In surviving patients, what plays a critical role is the subsequent secondary injury since, without effective treatments, complex cascades will promote additional brain damage
Autophagy in Cell Fate and Diseases
Autophagy pathway has been one of the hot topics during the last decade. From a general notion about its cellular role, autophagy becomes a more sophisticated phenomenon with significant implications in cellular homeostasis. Consequently, autophagy represents an emerging new factor in human diseases. Despite its general task, the bulk degradation of cellular constituents during starvation settings, autophagy possesses important cross talk and interrelationships with several cellular processes such as apoptosis and senescence, among others. This entire panorama gives us a complex but exciting scenario. Consequently, with the aim of encompassing the whole spectrum, in this chapter, we review three main topics: autophagy as a cellular process; autophagy in cell fate; and autophagy in disease. We discuss the emerging role of selective type of autophagy to avoid apoptosis or necrosis and the novel relationship between autophagy and senescence to understand the real extent that autophagy pathway has over cell fate. Finally, we briefly describe the current trends on autophagy in human pancreatic diseases and its role in cancer cell metabolism
Anatomy and physiology of cisternostomy
Cisternostomy is defined as opening the basal cisterns to atmospheric pressure. This technique helps to reduce the intracranial pressure in severe head trauma as well as other conditions when the so-called sudden "brain swelling" troubles the surgeon. We elaborated the surgical anatomy of this procedure as well as the proposed physiology of how cisternostomy works. This novel technique may change the current trends in neurosurgery
Neutron Irradiation of Mg11B2 : From the Enhancement to the Suppression of Superconducting Properties
In this letter we present the effect of neutron irradiation up to fluences of
3.9 1019 n/cm2 on the superconducting properties of MgB2. In order to obtain a
disorder structure homogeneously distributed, the experiment was carried out on
bulk samples prepared with the 11B isotope. Up to fluences of 1018 n/cm2 the
critical temperature is slightly diminished (36 K) and the superconducting
properties are significantly improved; the upper critical field is increased
from 13.5 T to 20.3 T at 12 K and the irreversibility field is doubled at 5 K.
For larger neutron fluences the critical temperature is suppressed down to 12 K
and the superconducting properties come out strongly degraded.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Appl.Phys.Let
Extended Skyrme interaction (II): ground state of nuclei and of nuclear matter
We study the effect of time-odd components of the Skyrme energy density
functionals on the ground state of finite nuclei and in nuclear matter. The
spin-density dependent terms, which have been recently proposed as an extension
of the standard Skyrme interaction, are shown to change the total binding
energy of odd-nuclei by only few tenths of keV, while the time-odd components
of standard Skyrme interactions give an effect that is larger by one order of
magnitude. The HFB-17 mass formula based on a Skyrme parametrization is
adjusted including the new spin-density dependent terms. A comprehensive study
of binding energies in the whole mass table of 2149 nuclei gives a root mean
square (rms) deviation of 0.575 MeV between experimental data and the
calculated results, which is slightly better than the original HFB-17 mass
formula. From the analysis of the spin instabilities of nuclear matter,
restrictions on the parameters governing the spin-density dependent terms are
evaluated. We conclude that with the extended Skyrme interaction, the Landau
parameters and could be tuned with a large flexibility
without changing the ground-state properties in nuclei and in nuclear matter.Comment: 18 pages, 4 tables, 6 figure
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