5,787 research outputs found
Particle production in models with helicity-0 graviton ghost in de Sitter spacetime
We revisit the problem of the helicity-0 ghost mode of massive graviton in
the de Sitter background. In general, the presence of a ghost particle, which
has negative energy, drives the vacuum to be unstable through pair production
of ghost particles and ordinary particles. In the case that the vacuum state
preserves the de Sitter invariance, the number density created by the pair
production inevitably diverges due to unsuppressed ultra-violet(UV)
contributions. In such cases one can immediately conclude that the model is not
viable. However, in the massive gravity theory we cannot construct a vacuum
state which respects the de Sitter invariance. Therefore the presence of a
ghost does not immediately mean the breakdown of the model. Explicitly
estimating the number density and the energy density of particles created by
the pair production of two conformal scalar particles and one helicity-0 ghost
graviton, we find that these densities both diverge. However, since models with
helicity-0 ghost graviton have no de Sitter invariant vacuum state, it is
rather natural to consider a UV cutoff scale in the three-dimensional momentum
space. Then, even if we take the cutoff scale as large as the Planck scale, the
created number density and energy density are well suppressed. In many models
the cutoff scale is smaller than the Planck scale. In such models the created
number density and the energy density are negligiblly small as long as only the
physics below the cutoff scale is concerned.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
No de Sitter invariant vacuum in massive gravity theory with ghost
In this letter we point out that the massive gravity theory with a graviton
ghost mode in de Sitter background cannot possess a de Sitter invariant vacuum
state. In order to avoid a negative norm state, we must associate the creation
operator of the ghost mode with a negative-energy mode function instead of a
positive-energy one as the mode function. Namely, we have to adopt a different
procedure of quantization for a ghost. When a theory has a symmetry mixing a
ghost mode with ordinary non-ghost modes, the choice of a ghost mode is not
unique. However, quantization of a ghost is impossible without specifying a
choice of ghost mode, which breaks the symmetry. For this reason, the vacuum
state cannot respect the symmetry. In the massive gravity theory with a
graviton ghost mode in de Sitter background, the ghost is the helicity-0 mode
of the graviton. This ghost mode is mixed with the other helicity graviton
modes under the action of de Sitter symmetry. Therefore, there is no de Sitter
invariant vacuum in such models. This leads to an interesting possibility that
non-covariant cutoff of the low energy effective theory may naturally arise. As
a result, the instability due to the pair production of a ghost and normal
non-ghost particles gets much milder and that the model may escape from being
rejected.Comment: 5 page
NMR relaxation of quantum spin chains in magnetic fields
We investigate NMR relaxation rates 1/T_1 of quantum spin chains in magnetic
fields. Universal properties for the divergence behavior of 1/T_1 are obtained
in the Tomonaga-Luttinger-liquid state. The results are discussed in comparison
with experimental results.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Ethnic Diversity or Ethnic Enclaves? Representing African American History in U.S. Museums
Museums are among the most significant places to represent history in their communities and influence visitors, including various generations, classes, and ethnic groups. There are often unequal power relationships between mainstream and minority groups at museums in a diverse society. Minority groups have had the opportunity to present their own historic interpretation in museum exhibits and programs in the United States since the 1960s. This helped to shape public memory in their societies. Does this mean museums contribute to peoples' understanding of other cultures, enabling them to see from a different perspective? I fear that the result of this increased ethnic diversity may be that people will get into ethnic enclaves. Museum professional staffs have the difficult responsibility for creating exhibits and programs that will attract visitors from both mainstream and ethnic groups. When that happens, museums fail to serve as a forum promoting diversity. In fact, they may act to maintain the distance between ethnic enclaves. Museums need to promote dialogues between ethnic groups in order to encourage museum visitors to accept diversity and learn about cultures other than their own
Rendezvous of Two Robots with Constant Memory
We study the impact that persistent memory has on the classical rendezvous
problem of two mobile computational entities, called robots, in the plane. It
is well known that, without additional assumptions, rendezvous is impossible if
the entities are oblivious (i.e., have no persistent memory) even if the system
is semi-synchronous (SSynch). It has been recently shown that rendezvous is
possible even if the system is asynchronous (ASynch) if each robot is endowed
with O(1) bits of persistent memory, can transmit O(1) bits in each cycle, and
can remember (i.e., can persistently store) the last received transmission.
This setting is overly powerful.
In this paper we weaken that setting in two different ways: (1) by
maintaining the O(1) bits of persistent memory but removing the communication
capabilities; and (2) by maintaining the O(1) transmission capability and the
ability to remember the last received transmission, but removing the ability of
an agent to remember its previous activities. We call the former setting
finite-state (FState) and the latter finite-communication (FComm). Note that,
even though its use is very different, in both settings, the amount of
persistent memory of a robot is constant.
We investigate the rendezvous problem in these two weaker settings. We model
both settings as a system of robots endowed with visible lights: in FState, a
robot can only see its own light, while in FComm a robot can only see the other
robot's light. We prove, among other things, that finite-state robots can
rendezvous in SSynch, and that finite-communication robots are able to
rendezvous even in ASynch. All proofs are constructive: in each setting, we
present a protocol that allows the two robots to rendezvous in finite time.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
Gathering an even number of robots in an odd ring without global multiplicity detection
We propose a gathering protocol for an even number of robots in a ring-shaped
network that allows symmetric but not periodic configurations as initial
configurations, yet uses only local weak multiplicity detection. Robots are
assumed to be anonymous and oblivious, and the execution model is the non-
atomic CORDA model with asynchronous fair scheduling. In our scheme, the number
of robots k must be greater than 8, the number of nodes n on a network must be
odd and greater than k+3. The running time of our protocol is O(n2)
asynchronous rounds.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1104.566
Sense of Self in Baby Chimpanzees
Philippe Rochat and his colleague tentatively proposed that young infants' propensity to engage in self-perception and systematic exploration of the perceptual consequences of their own action plays and is probably at the origin of an early sense of self: the ecological self. Rochat and Hespos (1997) reported that neonates discriminate between external and self-stimulation. Neonate tended to display significantly more rooting responses (i.e., head turn towards the stimulation with mouth open and tonguing) following external compared to self-stimulation. Rochat et al. (1998) also reported that 2-month-olds showed clear sign of modulation of their oral activity on the pacifier as a function of analog versus non-analog condition. Rochat and his colleague concluded that these observations are interpreted as evidence of self-exploration and the emergence of a sense of self-agency by 2-month-olds. We tried to replicate these findings in infant chimpanzees. We observed rooting responses of three baby chimpanzees in two condition, self-stimulation and external stimulation. In external stimulation condition, the index finger of the experimenter or small stick touched one of the infant's cheeks. In self-stimulation condition, the experimenter took infant's hand and touched his or her cheek with their fingers. In Rochat and Hespos, they recorded and analyzed several measures such as state, head movement, mouth activity and so on. How ever, we analyzed only mouth activities tentatively. We found infant chimpanzees tended to show more rooting responses following external stimulation compared to self-stimulation as well as human infants.
We also carried out sucking experiment with two baby chimpanzees. The experimenter held the pacifier and put the artificial nipple into the infant's mouth. A session started when the infant take the nipple inside the his or her mouth. Auditory stimulus, which was a complex tone comprised of six harmonics with equal intensity, was given to the chimpanzee according to the test condition during their sucking. There were four test conditions and each condition consisted with three types of feedback as follows: 1) silent baseline, contingent, and steady, 2) contingent baseline, 1-sec delay, and 3-sec delay, 3) contingent baseline, 6-sec delay, and 12-sec delay, 4) contingent baseline, 1/2 efficiency, and 1/4 efficiency. In test 1, one infant chimpanzee showed decrease of the minimum pressure of sucking in the contingent condition. In test 2, one subject showed shorter intervals of sucking in 3-sec delay condition. This seems to be similar to human infant's. We may be able to postulate ecological self in baby chimpanzees according to the self-exploration. In test 3 and 4, we did not obtain any effects of stimulus conditions. Results of these studies. These studies were conducted as the parts of the chimpanzee development project in Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, organized by Professor Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Structure and superconducting properties of ((Ln(1-x)Ln*(x) 1/2 (Ba(1-y)Sr(y) 1/3 Ce 1/6) 8Cu6O(z)
A variety of new oxide superconductors were prepared. The crystallographic structures of the oxides were all tetragonal and of the (Ln(+), Ce)4(Ln(+),Ba)4Cu6Oz (Ln(+) = Nd, Sm or Eu) type which had been previously discovered by Akimitsu et al. As the Sr content, y, increased when Ln = Ln(excited state) = Nd, the oxygen content, z, monotonically increased and the superconducting transition temperature, T(sub c), varied exhibiting a maximum. When z was controlled directly by means of high oxygen pressure sintering techniques, T(sub c) was changed accordingly. T(sub c's) of samples with different combinations of Ln and Ln(excited state) and different values of x and y were found to depend on the magnitude of the bond valence sum for a Cu atom located in the bottom plane of the Cu-O5 pyramid. Transport and magnetization measurements were carried out to investigate the magnetic field dependence of superconducting properties and to determine the phenomenological parameters. The Hall coefficients were positive below room temperature and varied yielding a maximum with respect to temperature
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