3,547 research outputs found
Following Strain-Induced Mosaicity Changes of Ferroelectric Thin Films by Ultrafast Reciprocal Space Mapping
We investigate coherent phonon propagation in a thin film of ferroelectric
PbZr0.2Ti0.8O3 (PZT) by ultrafast x-ray diffraction (UXRD) experiments, which
are analyzed as time-resolved reciprocal space mapping (RSM) in order to
observe the in- and out-of-plane structural dynamics simultaneously. The mosaic
structure of the PZT leads to a coupling of the excited out-of-plane expansion
to in-plane lattice dynamics on a picosecond timescale, which is not observed
for out-of-plane compression.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Spinning Dragging Strings
We use the AdS/CFT correspondence to compute the drag force experienced by a
heavy quark moving through a maximally supersymmetric SU(N) super Yang-Mills
plasma at nonzero temperature and R-charge chemical potential and at large 't
Hooft coupling. We resolve a discrepancy in the literature between two earlier
studies of such quarks. In addition, we consider small fluctuations of the
spinning strings dual to these probe quarks and find no evidence of
instabilities. We make some comments about suitable D7-brane boundary
conditions for the dual strings.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures; v2 refs added; v3 to appear in JHEP, clarifying
comment
N=1 gauge superpotentials from supergravity
We review the supergravity derivation of some non-perturbatively generated
effective superpotentials for N=1 gauge theories. Specifically, we derive the
Veneziano-Yankielowicz superpotential for pure N=1 Super Yang-Mills theory from
the warped deformed conifold solution, and the Affleck-Dine-Seiberg
superpotential for N=1 SQCD from a solution describing fractional D3-branes on
a C^3 / Z_2 x Z_2 orbifold.Comment: LaTeX, iopart class, 8 pages, 3 figures. Contribution to the
proceedings of the workshop of the RTN Network "The quantum structure of
space-time and the geometric nature of fundamental interactions", Copenhagen,
September 2003; v2: published version with minor clarification
Thermodynamics of AdS/QCD
We study finite temperature properties of four dimensional QCD-like gauge
theories in the gauge theory/gravity duality picture. The gravity dual contains
two deformed 5d AdS metrics, with and without a black hole, and a dilaton. We
study the thermodynamics of the 4d boundary theory and constrain the two
metrics so that they correspond to a high and a low temperature phase separated
by a first order phase transition. The equation of state has the standard form
for the pressure of a strongly coupled fluid modified by a vacuum energy, a bag
constant. We determine the parameters of the deformation by using QCD results
for and the hadron spectrum. With these parameters, we show that the
phase transition in the 4d boundary theory and the 5d bulk Hawking-Page
transition agree. We probe the dynamics of the two phases by computing the
quark-antiquark free energy in them and confirm that the transition corresponds
to confinement-deconfinement transition.Comment: 1+19 pages, 6 figures, references added, section 3 improve
Sound Waves in (2+1) Dimensional Holographic Magnetic Fluids
We use the AdS/CFT correspondence to study propagation of sound waves in
strongly coupled (2+1) dimensional conformal magnetic fluids. Our computation
provides a nontrivial consistency check of the viscous magneto-hydrodynamics of
Hartnoll-Kovtun-Muller-Sachdev to leading order in the external field.
Depending on the behavior of the magnetic field in the hydrodynamic limit, we
show that it can lead to further attenuation of sound waves in the (2+1)
dimensional conformal plasma, or reduce the speed of sound. We present both
field theory and dual supergravity descriptions of these phenomena. While to
the leading order in momenta the dispersion of the sound waves obtained from
the dual supergravity description agrees with the one predicted from field
theory, we find a discrepancy at higher order. This suggests that further
corrections to HKMS magneto-hydrodynamics are necessary.Comment: 32 pages, LaTeX; minor corrections, references added; an error in the
boundary conditions fixed, a slight change in the result
Sum Rules from an Extra Dimension
Using the gravity side of the AdS/CFT correspondence, we investigate the
analytic properties of thermal retarded Green's functions for scalars,
conserved currents, the stress tensor, and massless fermions. We provide some
results concerning their large and small frequency behavior and their pole
structure. From these results, it is straightforward to prove the validity of
various sum rules on the field theory side of the duality. We introduce a novel
contraction mapping we use to study the large frequency behavior of the Green's
functions.Comment: v2: 23 pages (plus appendix), revised presentation, discussion of
branch cuts moved to appendix, and some minor changes; v1: 24 pages (plus
appendix
Short distance properties of cascading gauge theories
We study the short distance (large momentum) properties of correlation
functions of cascading gauge theories by performing a tree-level computation in
their dual gravitational background. We prove that these theories are
holographically renormalizable; the correlators have only analytic ultraviolet
divergences, which may be removed by appropriate local counterterms. We find
that n-point correlation functions of properly normalized operators have the
expected scaling in the semi-classical gravity (large N) limit: they scale as
N_{eff}^{2-n} with N_{eff} proportional to ln(k/Lambda) where k is a typical
momentum. Our analysis thus confirms the interpretation of the cascading gauge
theories as renormalizable four-dimensional quantum field theories with an
effective number of degrees of freedom which logarithmically increases with the
energy.Comment: 47 pages, no figure
Betti numbers for numerical semigroup rings
We survey results related to the magnitude of the Betti numbers of numerical
semigroup rings and of their tangent cones.Comment: 22 pages; v2: updated references. To appear in Multigraded Algebra
and Applications (V. Ene, E. Miller Eds.
Shear Modes, Criticality and Extremal Black Holes
We consider a (2+1)-dimensional field theory, assumed to be holographically
dual to the extremal Reissner-Nordstrom AdS(4) black hole background, and
calculate the retarded correlators of charge (vector) current and
energy-momentum (tensor) operators at finite momentum and frequency. We show
that, similar to what was observed previously for the correlators of scalar and
spinor operators, these correlators exhibit emergent scaling behavior at low
frequency. We numerically compute the electromagnetic and gravitational
quasinormal frequencies (in the shear channel) of the extremal
Reissner-Nordstrom AdS(4) black hole corresponding to the spectrum of poles in
the retarded correlators. The picture that emerges is quite simple: there is a
branch cut along the negative imaginary frequency axis, and a series of
isolated poles corresponding to damped excitations. All of these poles are
always in the lower half complex frequency plane, indicating stability. We show
that this analytic structure can be understood as the proper limit of finite
temperature results as T is taken to zero holding the chemical potential fixed.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures, added reference
Hydrodynamics of R-charged D1-branes
We study the hydrodynamic properties of strongly coupled Yang-Mills
theory of the D1-brane at finite temperature and at a non-zero density of
R-charge in the framework of gauge/gravity duality. The gravity dual
description involves a charged black hole solution of an
Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton system in 3 dimensions which is obtained by a
consistent truncation of the spinning D1-brane in 10 dimensions. We evaluate
thermal and electrical conductivity as well as the bulk viscosity as a function
of the chemical potential conjugate to the R-charges of the D1-brane. We show
that the ratio of bulk viscosity to entropy density is independent of the
chemical potential and is equal to . The thermal conductivity and bulk
viscosity obey a relationship similar to the Wiedemann-Franz law. We show that
at the boundary of thermodynamic stability, the charge diffusion mode becomes
unstable and the transport coefficients exhibit critical behaviour. Our method
for evaluating the transport coefficients relies on expressing the second order
differential equations in terms of a first order equation which dictates the
radial evolution of the transport coefficient. The radial evolution equations
can be solved exactly for the transport coefficients of our interest. We
observe that transport coefficients of the D1-brane theory are related to that
of the M2-brane by an overall proportionality constant which sets the
dimensions.Comment: 57 pages, 12 figure
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