12,227 research outputs found
Note on Small Black Holes in AdS_p x S^q
It is commonly believed that small black holes in AdS_5 x S^5 can be
described by the ten dimensional Schwarzschild solution. This requires that the
self-dual five-form (which is nonzero in the background) does not fall through
the horizon and cause the black hole to grow. We verify that this is indeed the
case: There are static solutions to the five-form field equations in a ten
dimensional Schwarzschild spacetime. Similar results hold for other backgrounds
AdS_p x S^q of interest in supergravity.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Data catalog series for space science and applications flight missions. Volume 3A: Descriptions of low- and medium-altitude scientific spacecraft and investigations
Earth orbits spacecraft whose apogees are well below geostationary altitude and whose primary purpose is to conduct investigations in the near-Earth environment are considered
Data catalog series for space science and applications flight missions. Volume 3B: Descriptions of data sets from low- and medium-altitude scientific spacecraft and investigations
The main purpose of the data catalog series is to provide descriptive references to data generated by space science flight missions. The data sets described include all of the actual holdings of the Space Science Data Center (NSSDC), all data sets for which direct contact information is available, and some data collections held and serviced by foreign investigators, NASA and other U.S. government agencies. This volume contains narrative descriptions of data sets from low and medium altitude scientific spacecraft and investigations. The following spacecraft series are included: Mariner, Pioneer, Pioneer Venus, Venera, Viking, Voyager, and Helios. Separate indexes to the planetary and interplanetary missions are also provided
A Second Relativistic Mean Field and Virial Equation of State for Astrophysical Simulations
We generate a second equation of state (EOS) of nuclear matter for a wide
range of temperatures, densities, and proton fractions for use in supernovae,
neutron star mergers, and black hole formation simulations. We employ full
relativistic mean field (RMF) calculations for matter at intermediate density
and high density, and the Virial expansion of a non-ideal gas for matter at low
density. For this EOS we use the RMF effective interaction FSUGold, whereas our
earlier EOS was based on the RMF effective interaction NL3. The FSUGold
interaction has a lower pressure at high densities compared to the NL3
interaction. We calculate the resulting EOS at over 100,000 grid points in the
temperature range = 0 to 80 MeV, the density range = 10 to 1.6
fm, and the proton fraction range = 0 to 0.56. We then interpolate
these data points using a suitable scheme to generate a thermodynamically
consistent equation of state table on a finer grid. We discuss differences
between this EOS, our NL3 based EOS, and previous EOSs by Lattimer-Swesty and
H. Shen et al for the thermodynamic properties, composition, and neutron star
structure. The original FSUGold interaction produces an EOS, that we call
FSU1.7, that has a maximum neutron star mass of 1.7 solar masses. A
modification in the high density EOS is introduced to increase the maximum
neutron star mass to 2.1 solar masses and results in a slightly different EOS
that we call FSU2.1. The EOS tables for FSU1.7 and FSU2.1 are available for
download.Comment: updated version according to referee's comments. Phys. Rev. C in
pres
Quantum Einstein Gravity as a Topological Field Theory
General covariance in quantum gravity is seen once one integrates over all
possible metrics. In recent years topological field theories have given us a
different route to general covariance without integrating over all possible
metrics. Here we argue that Einstein quantum gravity may be viewed as a
topological field theory provided a certain constrant from the path integral
measure is satisfied.Comment: 10 pages, LaTe
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