269 research outputs found

    Exact Solutions of Five Dimensional Anisotropic Cosmologies

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    We solve the five dimensional vacuum Einstein equations for several kinds of anisotropic geometries. We consider metrics in which the spatial slices are characterized as Bianchi types-II and V, and the scale factors are dependent both on time and a non-compact fifth coordinate. We examine the behavior of the solutions we find, noting for which parameters they exhibit contraction over time of the fifth scale factor, leading naturally to dimensional reduction. We explore these within the context of the induced matter model: a Kaluza-Klein approach that associates the extra geometric terms due to the fifth coordinate with contributions to the four dimensional stress-energy tensor.Comment: 11 page

    Tuberculosis in Liver Transplant Recipients: Prophylaxis in an Endemic Area

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    AbstractBackgroundTuberculosis (TB) has a high prevalence in Brazil. The scenario of liver transplantation (LT) creates challenges: atypical presentation, treatment hepatotoxicity, and increased mortality. The majority of TB cases after transplantation represent reactivation of latent infections; therefore, prophylaxis (PX) plays a major role. The aim of this study was to evaluate the benefits of PX after LT based on a pretransplantation tuberculin test (TT) in an endemic area.MethodsRetrospective analysis of medical data from 376 adult cirrhotic patients undergoing OLT from 2001 to 2009.ResultsAmong 191 selected patients, 137 (71%) showed a pretransplant TT including 41 (30%) with a TT ≥5 mm. The 17 (40%) of these patients who were prescribed PX did not experience TB. Prophylaxis was discontinued in 5 patients (20%) owing to suspicion of hepatotoxicity (medium serum alanine transaminase 175 U/L). In the group without PX, we diagnosed 1 case of pulmonary TB. The overall prevalence of anergic patients in the cirrhotic phase was 65% and prevalence of TB 1%.ConclusionsThe prevalence of TB was similar to that reported in the literature, but positivity to TT was higher (34% vs 25%), possibly because of the endemicity of the area. There was a lower prevalence of extrapulmonary disease and no mortality. No patient undergoing PX with isoniazid, although incomplete due to suspicion of hepatotoxicity displayed TB. One patient without PX was affected by TB. The drug was effective but not always safe

    Are Musical Autobiographical Memories Special? It Ain’t Necessarily So

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    We compared young adults’ autobiographical (AB) memories involving Music to memories concerning other specific categories and to Everyday AB memories with no specific cue. In all cases, participants reported both their most vivid memory and another AB memory from approximately the same time. We analyzed responses via quantitative ratings scales on aspects such as vividness and importance, as well as via qualitative thematic coding. In the initial phase, comparison of Music-related to Everyday memories suggested all Musical memories had high emotional and vividness characteristics whereas Everyday memories elicited emotion and other heightened responses only in the “vivid” instruction condition. However, when we added two other specific AB categories (Dining and Holidays) in phase two, the Music memories were no longer unique. We offer these results as a cautionary tale: before concluding that music is special in its relationship to cognition, perception, or emotion, studies should include appropriate control conditions

    The Behavior of Kasner Cosmologies with Induced Matter

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    We extend the induced matter model, previously applied to a variety of isotropic cases, to a generalization of Bianchi type-I anisotropic cosmologies. The induced matter model is a 5D Kaluza-Klein approach in which assumptions of compactness are relaxed for the fifth coordinate, leading to extra geometric terms. One interpretation of these extra terms is to identify them as an ``induced matter'' contribution to the stress-energy tensor. In similar spirit, we construct a five dimensional metric in which the spatial slices possess Bianchi type-I geometry. We find a set of solutions for the five dimensional Einstein equations, and determine the pressure and density of induced matter. We comment on the long-term dynamics of the model, showing that the assumption of positive density leads to the contraction over time of the fifth scale factor.Comment: 14 page

    Signatures of non-gaussianity in the isocurvature modes of primordial black hole dark matter

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    Primordial black holes (PBHs) are black holes which may have formed very early on during the radiation dominated era in the early universe. We present here a method by which the large scale perturbations in the density of primordial black holes may be used to place tight constraints on non-gaussianity if PBHs account for dark matter (DM). The presence of local-type non-gaussianity is known to have a significant effect on the abundance of primordial black holes, and modal coupling from the observed CMB scale modes can significantly alter the number density of PBHs that form within different regions of the universe, which appear as DM isocurvature modes. Using the recent \emph{Planck} constraints on isocurvature perturbations, we show that PBHs are excluded as DM candidates for even very small local-type non-gaussianity, fNL0.001|f_{NL}|\approx0.001 and remarkably the constraint on gNLg_{NL} is almost as strong. Even small non-gaussianity is excluded if DM is composed of PBHs. If local non-Gaussianity is ever detected on CMB scales, the constraints on the fraction of the universe collapsing into PBHs (which are massive enough to have not yet evaporated) will become much tighter.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures. V2: minor corrections and changes, matches published versio

    Generalized Conformal Quantum Mechanics of D0-brane

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    We study the generalized conformal quantum mechanics of the probe D0-brane in the near horizon background of the bound state of source D0-branes. We elaborate on the relationship of such model to the M theory in the light cone frame.Comment: 14 pages, RevTeX, revised version with added references to appear in Phys. Rev.

    N=2 structures on solvable Lie algebras: the c=9 classification

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    Let G be a finite-dimensional Lie algebra (not necessarily semisimple). It is known that if G is self-dual (that is, if it possesses an invariant metric) then there is a canonical N=1 superconformal algebra associated to its N=1 affinization---that is, it admits an N=1 (affine) Sugawara construction. Under certain additional hypotheses, this N=1 structure admits an N=2 extension. If this is the case, G is said to possess an N=2 structure. It is also known that an N=2 structure on a self-dual Lie algebra G is equivalent to a vector space decomposition G = G_+ \oplus G_- where G_\pm are isotropic Lie subalgebras. In other words, N=2 structures on G are in one-to-one correspondence with Manin triples (G,G_+,G_-). In this paper we exploit this correspondence to obtain a classification of the c=9 N=2 structures on self-dual solvable Lie algebras. In the process we also give some simple proofs for a variety of Lie algebraic results concerning self-dual Lie algebras admitting symplectic or K\"ahler structures.Comment: 49 pages in 2 columns (=25 physical pages), (uufiles-gz-9)'d .dvi file (uses AMSFonts 2.1+). Revision: Added 1 reference, corrected typos, added some more materia

    A global map to aid the identification and screening of critical habitat for marine industries

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    Marine industries face a number of risks that necessitate careful analysis prior to making decisions on the siting of operations and facilities. An important emerging regulatory framework on environmental sustainability for business operations is the International Finance Corporation’s Performance Standard 6 (IFC PS6). Within PS6, identification of biodiversity significance is articulated through the concept of “Critical Habitat”, a definition developed by the IFC and detailed through criteria aligned with those that support internationally accepted biodiversity designations. No publicly available tools have been developed in either the marine or terrestrial realm to assess the likelihood of sites or operations being located within PS6-defined Critical Habitat. This paper presents a starting point towards filling this gap in the form of a preliminary global map that classifies more than 13 million km2 of marine and coastal areas of importance for biodiversity (protected areas, Key Biodiversity Areas [KBA], sea turtle nesting sites, cold- and warm-water corals, seamounts, seagrass beds, mangroves, saltmarshes, hydrothermal vents and cold seeps) based on their overlap with Critical Habitat criteria, as defined by IFC. In total, 5798×103 km2 (1.6%) of the analysis area (global ocean plus coastal land strip) were classed as Likely Critical Habitat, and 7526×103 km2 (2.1%) as Potential Critical Habitat; the remainder (96.3%) were Unclassified. The latter was primarily due to the paucity of biodiversity data in marine areas beyond national jurisdiction and/or in deep waters, and the comparatively fewer protected areas and KBAs in these regions. Globally, protected areas constituted 65.9% of the combined Likely and Potential Critical Habitat extent, and KBAs 29.3%, not accounting for the overlap between these two features. Relative Critical Habitat extent in Exclusive Economic Zones varied dramatically between countries. This work is likely to be of particular use for industries operating in the marine and coastal realms as an early screening aid prior to in situ Critical Habitat assessment; to financial institutions making investment decisions; and to those wishing to implement good practice policies relevant to biodiversity management. Supplementary material (available online) includes other global datasets considered, documentation and justification of biodiversity feature classification, detail of IFC PS6 criteria/scenarios, and coverage calculations

    "Low-state" Black Hole Accretion in Nearby Galaxies

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    I summarize the main observational properties of low-luminosity AGNs in nearby galaxies to argue that they are the high-mass analogs of black hole X-ray binaries in the "low/hard" state. The principal characteristics of low-state AGNs can be accommodated with a scenario in which the central engine is comprised of three components: an optically thick, geometrically accretion disk with a truncated inner radius, a radiatively inefficient flow, and a compact jet.Comment: 8 pages. To appear in From X-ray Binaries to Quasars: Black Hole Accretion on All Mass Scales, ed. T. J. Maccarone, R. P. Fender, and L. C. Ho (Dordrecht: Kluwer

    Entanglement transfer from dissociated molecules to photons

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    We introduce and study the concept of a reversible transfer of the quantum state of two internally-translationally entangled fragments, formed by molecular dissociation, to a photon pair. The transfer is based on intracavity stimulated Raman adiabatic passage and it requires a combination of processes whose principles are well established.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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