854 research outputs found
Relativistic mean-field study of neutron-rich nuclei
A relativistic mean-field model is used to study the ground-state properties
of neutron-rich nuclei. Nonlinear isoscalar-isovector terms, unconstrained by
present day phenomenology, are added to the model Lagrangian in order to modify
the poorly known density dependence of the symmetry energy. These new terms
soften the symmetry energy and reshape the theoretical neutron drip line
without compromising the agreement with existing ground-state information. A
strong correlation between the neutron radius of 208Pb and the binding energy
of valence orbitals is found: the smaller the neutron radius of 208Pb, the
weaker the binding energy of the last occupied neutron orbital. Thus, models
with the softest symmetry energy are the first ones to drip neutrons. Further,
in anticipation of the upcoming one-percent measurement of the neutron radius
of 208Pb at the Thomas Jefferson Laboratory, a close relationship between the
neutron radius of 208Pb and neutron radii of elements of relevance to atomic
parity-violating experiments is established.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Efficiency of a Brownian information machine
A Brownian information machine extracts work from a heat bath through a
feedback process that exploits the information acquired in a measurement. For
the paradigmatic case of a particle trapped in a harmonic potential, we
determine how power and efficiency for two variants of such a machine operating
cyclically depend on the cycle time and the precision of the positional
measurements. Controlling only the center of the trap leads to a machine that
has zero efficiency at maximum power whereas additional optimal control of the
stiffness of the trap leads to an efficiency bounded between 1/2, which holds
for maximum power, and 1 reached even for finite cycle time in the limit of
perfect measurements.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Plane waves with weak singularities
We study a class of time dependent solutions of the vacuum Einstein equations
which are plane waves with weak null singularities. This singularity is weak in
the sense that though the tidal forces diverge at the singularity, the rate of
divergence is such that the distortion suffered by a freely falling observer
remains finite. Among such weak singular plane waves there is a sub-class which
do not exhibit large back reaction in the presence of test scalar probes.
String propagation in these backgrounds is smooth and there is a natural way to
continue the metric beyond the singularity. This continued metric admits string
propagation without the string becoming infinitely excited. We construct a one
parameter family of smooth metrics which are at a finite distance in the space
of metrics from the extended metric and a well defined operator in the string
sigma model which resolves the singularity.Comment: 22 pages, Added references and clarifying comment
Multiple Keratoacanthomas, Philadelphia Chromosome+ Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia, and Dasatinib: A Case Report
Background: Treatment for adult Philadelphia chromosome+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia includes using dasatinib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas are common findings in patients treated with BRAF inhibitors of tyrosine kinases. No documentation of dasatinib inducing multiple keratoacanthomas, squamous cell carcinomas type during treatment of Philadelphia chromosome+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia is currently available. Case: A 77-year-old Caucasian male presented to the dermatology clinic two months after starting treatment with dasatinib for Philadelphia chromosome positive+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Biopsies confirmed the lesions on the arms, chest, legs and back as keratoacanthoma (KA) type of squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs). The cutaneous lesions were surgically removed and no new or recurrent lesions were detected since their initial rapid onset despite continued dasatinib therapy. Conclusion: This report of the rapid onset of keratoacanthoma type squamous cell carcinomas in a patient with Philadelphia chromosome+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with dasatinib is presumed to be the first due to the rarity of adult Philadelphia chromosome+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia. This report documents another tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is associated with the eruption of keratoacanthomas, and adds to the literature regarding the regularity of this relatively common side effect, which may have treatment other than surgery if only a few lesions are present
Higher spin quasinormal modes and one-loop determinants in the BTZ black hole
We solve the wave equations of arbitrary integer spin fields in the BTZ black
hole background and obtain exact expressions for their quasinormal modes. We
show that these quasinormal modes precisely agree with the location of the
poles of the corresponding two point function in the dual conformal field
theory as predicted by the AdS/CFT correspondence. We then use these
quasinormal modes to construct the one-loop determinant of the higher spin
field in the thermal BTZ background. This is shown to agree with that obtained
from the corresponding heat kernel constructed recently by group theoretic
methods.Comment: 47 page
Role of heavy-meson exchange in pion production near threshold
Recent calculations of -wave pion production have severely underestimated
the accurately known \ total cross section near
threshold. In these calculations, only the single-nucleon axial-charge operator
is considered. We have calculated, in addition to the one-body term, the
two-body contributions to this reaction that arise from the exchange of mesons.
We find that the inclusion of the scalar -meson exchange current (and
lesser contributions from other mesons) increases the cross section by about a
factor of five, and leads to excellent agreement with the data. The results are
neither very sensitive to changes in the distorting potential that generates
the wave function, nor to different choices for the meson-nucleon form
factors. We argue that \ data provide direct
experimental evidence for meson-exchange contributions to the axial current.Comment: 28 Pages, IU-NTC #93-0
Power-law singularities in string theory and M-theory
We extend the definition of the Szekeres-Iyer power-law singularities to
supergravity, string and M-theory backgrounds, and find that are characterized
by Kasner type exponents. The near singularity geometries of brane and some
intersecting brane backgrounds are investigated and the exponents are computed.
The Penrose limits of some of these power-law singularities have profiles
for . We find the range of the
exponents for which and the frequency squares are bounded by 1/4. We
propose some qualitative tests for deciding whether a null or timelike
spacetime singularity can be resolved within string theory and M-theory based
on the near singularity geometry and its Penrose limits.Comment: 32 page
Random walks and the Hagedorn transition
We study details of the approach to the Hagedorn temperature in string theory
in various static spacetime backgrounds. We show that the partition function
for a {\it single} string at finite temperature is the torus amplitude
restricted to unit winding around Euclidean time. We use the worldsheet path
integral to derive the statement that the the sum over random walks of the
thermal scalar near the Hagedorn transition is precisely the image under a
modular transformation of the sum over spatial configurations of a single
highly excited string. We compute the radius of gyration of thermally excited
strings in . We show that the winding mode indicates an
instability despite the AdS curvature at large radius, and that the negative
mass squared decreases with decreasing AdS radius, much like the type 0
tachyon. We add further arguments to statements by Barbon and Rabinovici, and
by Adams {\it et. al.}, that the Euclidean AdS black hole can thought of as a
condensate of the thermal scalar. We use this to provide circumstantial
evidence that the condensation of the thermal scalar decouples closed string
modes.Comment: 34 pages (7 of references), 5 figures. v2: Reference added, grant
acknowledgement added, typos correcte
Spatial Hypersurfaces in Causal Set Cosmology
Within the causal set approach to quantum gravity, a discrete analog of a
spacelike region is a set of unrelated elements, or an antichain. In the
continuum approximation of the theory, a moment-of-time hypersurface is well
represented by an inextendible antichain. We construct a richer structure
corresponding to a thickening of this antichain containing non-trivial
geometric and topological information. We find that covariant observables can
be associated with such thickened antichains and transitions between them, in
classical stochastic growth models of causal sets. This construction highlights
the difference between the covariant measure on causal set cosmology and the
standard sum-over-histories approach: the measure is assigned to completed
histories rather than to histories on a restricted spacetime region. The
resulting re-phrasing of the sum-over-histories may be fruitful in other
approaches to quantum gravity.Comment: Revtex, 12 pages, 2 figure
Brane cosmology with a bulk scalar field
We consider ``cosmologically symmetric'' (i.e. solutions with homogeneity and
isotropy along three spatial dimensions) five-dimensional spacetimes with a
scalar field and a three-brane representing our universe. We write Einstein's
equations in a conformal gauge, using light-cone coordinates. We obtain
explicit solutions: a. assuming proportionality between the scalar field and
the logarithm of the (bulk) scale factor; b. assuming separable solutions. We
then discuss the cosmology in the brane nduced by these solutions.Comment: 24 pages, Latex, no figur
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