225 research outputs found
Cascade of Gregory-Laflamme Transitions and U(1) Breakdown in Super Yang-Mills
In this paper we consider black p-branes on square torus. We find an
indication of a cascade of Gregory-Laflamme transitions between black p-brane
and (p-1)-brane. Through AdS/CFT correspondence, these transitions are related
to the breakdown of the U(1) symmetry in super Yang-Mills on torus. We argue a
relationship between the cascade and recent Monte-Carlo data.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX, v2: comments and references added, v3:
minor changes and a reference adde
Matched Asymptotic Expansion for Caged Black Holes - Regularization of the Post-Newtonian Order
The "dialogue of multipoles" matched asymptotic expansion for small black
holes in the presence of compact dimensions is extended to the Post-Newtonian
order for arbitrary dimensions. Divergences are identified and are regularized
through the matching constants, a method valid to all orders and known as
Hadamard's partie finie. It is closely related to "subtraction of
self-interaction" and shows similarities with the regularization of quantum
field theories. The black hole's mass and tension (and the "black hole
Archimedes effect") are obtained explicitly at this order, and a Newtonian
derivation for the leading term in the tension is demonstrated. Implications
for the phase diagram are analyzed, finding agreement with numerical results
and extrapolation shows hints for Sorkin's critical dimension - a dimension
where the transition turns second order.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures. v2:published versio
Phase structure of matrix quantum mechanics at finite temperature
We study matrix quantum mechanics at finite temperature by Monte Carlo
simulation. The model is obtained by dimensionally reducing 10d U(N) pure
Yang-Mills theory to 1d. Following Aharony et al., one can view the same model
as describing the high temperature regime of (1+1)d U(N) super Yang-Mills
theory on a circle. In this interpretation an analog of the deconfinement
transition was conjectured to be a continuation of the black-hole/black-string
transition in the dual gravity theory. Our detailed analysis in the critical
regime up to N=32 suggests the existence of the non-uniform phase, in which the
eigenvalue distribution of the holonomy matrix is non-uniform but gapless. The
transition to the gapped phase is of second order. The internal energy is
constant (giving the ground state energy) in the uniform phase, and rises
quadratically in the non-uniform phase, which implies that the transition
between these two phases is of third order.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, (v2) refined arguments in section 3 ; reference
adde
New Phases of Near-Extremal Branes on a Circle
We study the phases of near-extremal branes on a circle, by which we mean
near-extremal branes of string theory and M-theory with a circle in their
transverse space. We find a map that takes any static and neutral Kaluza-Klein
black hole, i.e. any static and neutral black hole on Minkowski-space times a
circle M^d x S^1, and map it to a corresponding solution for a near-extremal
brane on a circle. The map is derived using first a combined boost and
U-duality transformation on the Kaluza-Klein black hole, transforming it to a
solution for a non-extremal brane on a circle. The resulting solution for a
near-extremal brane on a circle is then obtained by taking a certain
near-extremal limit. As a consequence of the map, we can transform the neutral
non-uniform black string branch into a new non-uniform phase of near-extremal
branes on a circle. Furthermore, we use recently obtained analytical results on
small black holes in Minkowski-space times a circle to get new information
about the localized phase of near-extremal branes on a circle. This gives in
turn predictions for the thermal behavior of the non-gravitational theories
dual to these near-extremal branes. In particular, we give predictions for the
thermodynamics of supersymmetric Yang-Mills theories on a circle, and we find a
new stable phase of (2,0) Little String Theory in the canonical ensemble for
temperatures above its Hagedorn temperature.Comment: 72 pages, 5 figures. v2: Typos fixed, refs. added. v3: Sec. 3.2 fixe
Thermodynamics of Large N Gauge Theories with Chemical Potentials in a 1/D Expansion
In order to understand thermodynamical properties of N D-branes with chemical
potentials associated with R-symmetry charges, we study a one dimensional large
N gauge theory (bosonic BFSS type model) as a first step. This model is
obtained through a dimensional reduction of a 1+D dimensional SU(N) Yang-Mills
theory and we use a 1/D expansion to investigate the phase structure. We find
three phases in the \mu-T plane. We also show that all the adjoint scalars
condense at large D and obtain a mass dynamically. This dynamical mass protects
our model from the usual perturbative instability of massless scalars in a
non-zero chemical potential. We find that the system is at least meta-stable
for arbitrary large values of the chemical potentials in D \to \infty limit. We
also explore the existence of similar condensation in higher dimensional gauge
theories in a high temperature limit. In 2 and 3 dimensions, the condensation
always happens as in one dimensional case. On the other hand, if the dimension
is higher than 4, there is a critical chemical potential and the condensation
happens only if the chemical potentials are below it.Comment: 37 pages, 4 figures; v2: minor corrections, references added; v3:
minor corrections, to appear in JHE
Black Holes in Higher-Dimensional Gravity
These lectures review some of the recent progress in uncovering the phase
structure of black hole solutions in higher-dimensional vacuum Einstein
gravity. The two classes on which we focus are Kaluza-Klein black holes, i.e.
static solutions with an event horizon in asymptotically flat spaces with
compact directions, and stationary solutions with an event horizon in
asymptotically flat space. Highlights include the recently constructed
multi-black hole configurations on the cylinder and thin rotating black rings
in dimensions higher than five. The phase diagram that is emerging for each of
the two classes will be discussed, including an intriguing connection that
relates the phase structure of Kaluza-Klein black holes with that of
asymptotically flat rotating black holes.Comment: latex, 49 pages, 5 figures. Lectures to appear in the proceedings of
the Fourth Aegean Summer School, Mytiline, Lesvos, Greece, September 17-22,
200
Instabilities of Black Strings and Branes
We review recent progress on the instabilities of black strings and branes
both for pure Einstein gravity as well as supergravity theories which are
relevant for string theory. We focus mainly on Gregory-Laflamme instabilities.
In the first part of the review we provide a detailed discussion of the
classical gravitational instability of the neutral uniform black string in
higher dimensional gravity. The uniform black string is part of a larger phase
diagram of Kaluza-Klein black holes which will be discussed thoroughly. This
phase diagram exhibits many interesting features including new phases,
non-uniqueness and horizon-topology changing transitions. In the second part,
we turn to charged black branes in supergravity and show how the
Gregory-Laflamme instability of the neutral black string implies via a
boost/U-duality map similar instabilities for non- and near-extremal smeared
branes in string theory. We also comment on instabilities of D-brane bound
states. The connection between classical and thermodynamic stability, known as
the correlated stability conjecture, is also reviewed and illustrated with
examples. Finally, we examine the holographic implications of the
Gregory-Laflamme instability for a number of non-gravitational theories
including Yang-Mills theories and Little String Theory.Comment: 119 pages, 16 figures. Invited review for Classical and Quantum
Gravit
Validity of the WKB Approximation in Calculating the Asymptotic Quasinormal Modes of Black Holes
In this paper, we categorize non-rotating black hole spacetimes based on
their pole structure and in each of these categories we determine whether the
WKB approximation is a valid approximation for calculating the asymptotic
quasinormal modes. We show that Schwarzschild black holes with the Gauss-Bonnet
correction belong to the category in which the WKB approximation is invalid for
calculating these modes. In this context, we further discuss and clarify some
of the ambiguity in the literature surrounding the validity conditions provided
for the WKB approximation.Comment: 10 page
Morphological analysis of the Dolichoderine ants of Madagascar (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Cerebellar ataxia can be induced by a large number of drugs. We here conducted a systemic review of the drugs that can lead to cerebellar ataxia as an adverse drug reaction (ADR). METHODS: We performed a systematic literature search in Pubmed (1966 to January 2014) and EMBASE (1988 to January 2014) to identify all of the drugs that can have ataxia as an ADR and to assess the frequency of drug-induced ataxia for individual drugs. Furthermore, we collected reports of drug-induced ataxia over the past 20 years in the Netherlands by querying a national register of ADRs. RESULTS: Drug-induced ataxia was reported in association with 93 individual drugs (57 from the literature, 36 from the Dutch registry). The most common groups were antiepileptic drugs, benzodiazepines, and antineoplastics. For some, the number needed to harm was below 10. Ataxia was commonly reversible, but persistent symptoms were described with lithium and certain antineoplastics. CONCLUSIONS: It is important to be aware of the possibility that ataxia might be drug-induced, and for some drugs the relative frequency of this particular ADR is high. In most patients, symptoms occur within days or weeks after the introduction of a new drug or an increase in dose. In general, ataxia tends to disappear after discontinuation of the drug, but chronic ataxia has been described for some drugs
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