22 research outputs found

    Semi-quantitative Risk Evaluation for the Occurrence of Salmonella spec. in Swine Herds and Slaughter Plants

    Get PDF
    The implementation of a “Salmonella Monitoring and Reduction Programme” in the framework of the emerging national quality assurance programme (it is called the “QS-System”) for food products (starting with pork) in Germany has led to the necessity to provide farmers and slaughter plants with guidelines for a) how to identify the critical points on their own farm and in their own slaughter plant that could be “responsible” for a high Salmonella load of the final product (= live slaughter pigs in case of the farm or carcasses and cut meat in case of the slaughter plant), and b) how to develop a “HACCP-like” plan for a measurable reduction of the salmonella load. The paper describes the development of check lists that can be used for both benchmarking and identifying “weak points” as basis for targeted intervention strategies in the framework of continuous improvement programmes

    Matrix Models, Emergent Gravity, and Gauge Theory

    Full text link
    Matrix models of Yang-Mills type induce an effective gravity theory on 4-dimensional branes, which are considered as models for dynamical space-time. We review recent progress in the understanding of this emergent gravity. The metric is not fundamental but arises effectively in the semi-classical limit, along with nonabelian gauge fields. This leads to a mechanism for protecting certain geometries from corrections due to the vacuum energy.Comment: 8 pages. Based on invited talks given at the Conferences "Quantum Spacetime and Noncommutative Geometry", Rome, 2008 and at "Workshop on quantum gravity and nocommutative geometry", Lisbon, 2008 and at "Emergent Gravity", Boston, 2008 and at DICE2008, Italy, 2008 and at "QG2 2008 Quantum Geometry and Quantum Gravity", Nottingham, 200

    Absence of a fuzzy S4S^4 phase in the dimensionally reduced 5d Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons model

    Full text link
    We perform nonperturbative studies of the dimensionally reduced 5d Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons model, in which a four-dimensional fuzzy manifold, ``fuzzy S4^{4}'', is known to exist as a classical solution. Although the action is unbounded from below, Monte Carlo simulations provide an evidence for a well-defined vacuum, which stabilizes at large NN, when the coefficient of the Chern-Simons term is sufficiently small. The fuzzy S4^{4} prepared as an initial configuration decays rapidly into this vacuum in the process of thermalization. Thus we find that the model does not possess a ``fuzzy S4^{4} phase'' in contrast to our previous results on the fuzzy S2^{2}.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, (v2) typos correcte

    Dynamical aspects of the fuzzy CP2^{2} in the large NN reduced model with a cubic term

    Full text link
    ``Fuzzy CP^2'', which is a four-dimensional fuzzy manifold extension of the well-known fuzzy analogous to the fuzzy 2-sphere (S^2), appears as a classical solution in the dimensionally reduced 8d Yang-Mills model with a cubic term involving the structure constant of the SU(3) Lie algebra. Although the fuzzy S^2, which is also a classical solution of the same model, has actually smaller free energy than the fuzzy CP^2, Monte Carlo simulation shows that the fuzzy CP^2 is stable even nonperturbatively due to the suppression of tunneling effects at large N as far as the coefficient of the cubic term (α\alpha) is sufficiently large. As \alpha is decreased, both the fuzzy CP2^2 and the fuzzy S^2 collapse to a solid ball and the system is essentially described by the pure Yang-Mills model (\alpha = 0). The corresponding transitions are of first order and the critical points can be understood analytically. The gauge group generated dynamically above the critical point turns out to be of rank one for both CP^2 and S^2 cases. Above the critical point, we also perform perturbative calculations for various quantities to all orders, taking advantage of the one-loop saturation of the effective action in the large-N limit. By extrapolating our Monte Carlo results to N=\infty, we find excellent agreement with the all order results.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, (v2) References added (v3) all order analyses added, some typos correcte

    Nonperturbative studies of fuzzy spheres in a matrix model with the Chern-Simons term

    Full text link
    Fuzzy spheres appear as classical solutions in a matrix model obtained via dimensional reduction of 3-dimensional Yang-Mills theory with the Chern-Simons term. Well-defined perturbative expansion around these solutions can be formulated even for finite matrix size, and in the case of kk coincident fuzzy spheres it gives rise to a regularized U(kk) gauge theory on a noncommutative geometry. Here we study the matrix model nonperturbatively by Monte Carlo simulation. The system undergoes a first order phase transition as we change the coefficient (α\alpha) of the Chern-Simons term. In the small α\alpha phase, the large NN properties of the system are qualitatively the same as in the pure Yang-Mills model (α=0\alpha =0), whereas in the large α\alpha phase a single fuzzy sphere emerges dynamically. Various `multi fuzzy spheres' are observed as meta-stable states, and we argue in particular that the kk coincident fuzzy spheres cannot be realized as the true vacuum in this model even in the large NN limit. We also perform one-loop calculations of various observables for arbitrary kk including k=1k=1. Comparison with our Monte Carlo data suggests that higher order corrections are suppressed in the large NN limit.Comment: Latex 37 pages, 13 figures, discussion on instabilities refined, references added, typo corrected, the final version to appear in JHE

    Electrolyte Imbalance Determination of a Vanadium Redox Flow Battery by Potential‐Step Analysis of the Initial Charging

    Get PDF
    Vanadium redox flow batteries (VRFB) suffer from capacity fades owing to side reactions and crossover effects through the membrane. These processes lead to a deviation of the optimal initial average oxidation state (AOS=+3.5) of vanadium species in both half‐cell electrolytes. To rebalance the electrolyte solutions, it is first necessary to determine the current AOS. In this study, a new method was developed that enables an accurate determination of the AOS. A potential‐step analysis was performed with mixed electrolyte solutions of both half‐cells during the initial charging. The potential was recorded with a simple open‐circuit voltage (OCV) cell, and the potential‐steps were analyzed. A correlation between the duration of the potential plateaus in the OCV and the amount of vanadium ions of a certain oxidation state in the half‐cell electrolytes was found and used to precisely determine the AOS with a maximum error of 3.6 %

    Scalar Solitons on the Fuzzy Sphere

    Full text link
    We study scalar solitons on the fuzzy sphere at arbitrary radius and noncommutativity. We prove that no solitons exist if the radius is below a certain value. Solitons do exist for radii above a critical value which depends on the noncommutativity parameter. We construct a family of soliton solutions which are stable and which converge to solitons on the Moyal plane in an appropriate limit. These solutions are rotationally symmetric about an axis and have no allowed deformations. Solitons that describe multiple lumps on the fuzzy sphere can also be constructed but they are not stable.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, typo corrected and stylistic changes. v3: reference adde

    Emergent Geometry and Gravity from Matrix Models: an Introduction

    Full text link
    A introductory review to emergent noncommutative gravity within Yang-Mills Matrix models is presented. Space-time is described as a noncommutative brane solution of the matrix model, i.e. as submanifold of \R^D. Fields and matter on the brane arise as fluctuations of the bosonic resp. fermionic matrices around such a background, and couple to an effective metric interpreted in terms of gravity. Suitable tools are provided for the description of the effective geometry in the semi-classical limit. The relation to noncommutative gauge theory and the role of UV/IR mixing is explained. Several types of geometries are identified, in particular "harmonic" and "Einstein" type of solutions. The physics of the harmonic branch is discussed in some detail, emphasizing the non-standard role of vacuum energy. This may provide new approach to some of the big puzzles in this context. The IKKT model with D=10 and close relatives are singled out as promising candidates for a quantum theory of fundamental interactions including gravity.Comment: Invited topical review for Classical and Quantum Gravity. 57 pages, 5 figures. V2,V3: minor corrections and improvements. V4,V5: some improvements, refs adde

    Layered composite membranes based on porous PVDF coated with a thin, dense PBI layer for vanadium redox flow batteries

    Get PDF
    A commercial porous polyvinylidene fluoride membrane (pore size 0.65 μm, nominally 125 μm thick) is spray coated with 1.2–4 μm thick layers of polybenzimidazole. The area resistance of the porous support is 36.4 mΩ cm2 in 2 M sulfuric acid, in comparison to 540 mΩ cm2 for a 27 μm thick acid doped polybenzimidazole membrane, and 124 mΩ cm2 for PVDF-P20 (4 μm thick blocking layer). Addition of vanadium ions to the supporting electrolyte increases the resistance, but less than for Nafion. The expected reason is a change in the osmotic pressure when the ionic strength of the electrolyte is increased, reducing the water contents in the membrane. The orientation of the composite membranes has a strong impact. Lower permeability values are found when the blocking layer is oriented towards the vanadium-lean side in ex-situ measurements. Cells with the blocking layer on the positive side have significantly lower capacity fade, also much lower than cells using Nafion 212. The coulombic efficiency of cells with PVDF-PBI membranes (98.4%) is higher than that of cells using Nafion 212 (93.6%), whereas the voltage efficiency is just slightly lower, resulting in energy efficiencies of 85.1 and 83.3%, respectively, at 80 mA/cm2

    Semi-quantitative Risk Evaluation for the Occurrence of Salmonella spec. in Swine Herds and Slaughter Plants

    Get PDF
    The implementation of a “Salmonella Monitoring and Reduction Programme” in the framework of the emerging national quality assurance programme (it is called the “QS-System”) for food products (starting with pork) in Germany has led to the necessity to provide farmers and slaughter plants with guidelines for a) how to identify the critical points on their own farm and in their own slaughter plant that could be “responsible” for a high Salmonella load of the final product (= live slaughter pigs in case of the farm or carcasses and cut meat in case of the slaughter plant), and b) how to develop a “HACCP-like” plan for a measurable reduction of the salmonella load. The paper describes the development of check lists that can be used for both benchmarking and identifying “weak points” as basis for targeted intervention strategies in the framework of continuous improvement programmes.</p
    corecore