3,425 research outputs found
Decay of long-lived massive closed superstring states: Exact results
We find a one-parameter family of long-lived physical string states in type
II superstring theory. We compute the decay rate by an exact numerical
evaluation of the imaginary part of the one-loop propagator. Remarkably, the
lifetime rapidly increases with the mass. We find a power-law dependence of the
form , where the value of depends on
the parameter characterizing the state. For the most stable state in this
family, one has . The dominant decay channel of these massive
string states is by emission of soft massless particles. The quantum states can
be viewed semiclassically as closed strings which cannot break during the
classical evolution.Comment: Latex, 5 figures, 35 pages (= 23 pages + appendices). Minor
correction
Edge Tunneling of Vortices in Superconducting Thin Films
We investigate the phenomenon of the decay of a supercurrent due to the
zero-temperature quantum tunneling of vortices from the edge in a thin
superconducting film in the absence of an external magnetic field. An explicit
formula is derived for the tunneling rate of vortices, which are subject to the
Magnus force induced by the supercurrent, through the Coulomb-like potential
barrier binding them to the film's edge. Our approach ensues from the
non-relativistic version of a Schwinger-type calculation for the decay of the
2D vacuum previously employed for describing vortex-antivortex pair-nucleation
in the bulk of the sample. In the dissipation-dominated limit, our explicit
edge-tunneling formula yields numerical estimates which are compared with those
obtained for bulk-nucleation to show that both mechanisms are possible for the
decay of a supercurrent.Comment: REVTeX file, 15 pages, 1 Postscript figure; to appear in Phys.Rev.
Novel Unsymmetrical Ru(III) and Mixed-valence Ru(III)/Ru(II) Dinuclear Compounds Related to the Antimetastatic Ru(III) Drug NAMI-A
In this paper we report the stepwise preparation and the characterization of new unsymmetrical monoanionic
Ru(III) dinuclear compounds, [NH4][{trans-RuCl4(Me2SO-S)}(μ-L){mer-RuCl3(Me2SO-S)(Me2SO-O)}] (L = pyz (1), pym (2)). By a similar synthetic approach we also prepared new mixed-valence Ru(III)/Ru(II)
dinuclear compounds of formula [NH4][{trans-RuCl4(Me2SO-S)}(μ-pyz){cis,cis,cis-RuCl2(Me2SO-S)2(CO)}] (L = pyrazine (pyz, 3), pyrimidine (pym, 4)). Moreover, we describe the chemical behavior of compounds 1-4 in physiological solution, also after complete reduction (with ascorbic acid) to the corresponding Ru(II)/Ru(II) species. Overall, the chemical behavior of 1 and 2 after reduction resembles that of the corresponding dianionic and neutral dinuclear species, [{trans-RuCl3(Me2SO-S)}2(μ-L)]2−and [{mer-RuCl3(Me2SO-S)(Me2SO-O)}2 (μ-L)]. On the other hand, the mixed-valence dinuclear compounds 3 and 4,
owing to the great inertness of the cis,cis,cis-RuCl2(Me2SO-S)2(CO)(1/2μ-L) fragment, behave substantially
like the mononuclear species [trans-RuCl4(Me2SO-S)(L)]− in which the terminally bonded L ligand can be
considered as bearing a bulky substituent on the other N atom
Horava-Lifshitz Cosmology: A Review
This article reviews basic construction and cosmological implications of a
power-counting renormalizable theory of gravitation recently proposed by
Horava. We explain that (i) at low energy this theory does not exactly recover
general relativity but instead mimic general relativity plus dark matter; that
(ii) higher spatial curvature terms allow bouncing and cyclic universes as
regular solutions; and that (iii) the anisotropic scaling with the dynamical
critical exponent z=3 solves the horizon problem and leads to scale-invariant
cosmological perturbations even without inflation. We also comment on issues
related to an extra scalar degree of freedom called scalar graviton. In
particular, for spherically-symmetric, static, vacuum configurations we prove
non-perturbative continuity of the lambda->1+0 limit, where lambda is a
parameter in the kinetic action and general relativity has the value lambda=1.
We also derive the condition under which linear instability of the scalar
graviton does not show up.Comment: 28 pages, invited review for CQG; version to be published (v2
Measurement of sea waves
Sea waves constitute a natural phenomenon with a great impact on human activities, and their monitoring is essential for meteorology, coastal safety, navigation, and renewable energy from the sea. Therefore, the main measurement techniques for their monitoring are here reviewed, including buoys, satellite observation, coastal radars, shipboard observation, and microseism analysis. For each technique, the measurement principle is briefly recalled, the degree of development is outlined, and trends are prospected. The complementarity of such techniques is also highlighted, and the need for further integration in local and global networks is stressed
Duality and higher derivative terms in M theory
Dualities of M-theory are used to determine the exact dependence on the
coupling constant of the D^6R^4 interaction of the IIA and IIB superstring
effective action. Upon lifting to eleven dimensions this determines the
coefficient of the D^6R^4 interaction in eleven-dimensional M-theory. These
results are obtained by considering the four-graviton two-loop scattering
amplitude in eleven-dimensional supergravity compactified on a circle and on a
two-torus -- extending earlier results concerning lower-derivative
interactions. The torus compactification leads to an interesting
SL(2,Z)-invariant function of the complex structure of the torus (the IIB
string coupling) that satisfies a Laplace equation with a source term on the
fundamental domain of moduli space. The structure of this equation is in accord
with general supersymmetry considerations and immediately determines tree-level
and one-loop contributions to D^6R^4 in perturbative IIB string theory that
agree with explicit string calculations, and two-loop and three-loop
contributions that have yet to be obtained in string theory. The complete
solution of the Laplace equation contains infinite series' of single
D-instanton and double D-instanton contributions, in addition to the
perturbative terms. General considerations of the higher loop diagrams of
eleven-dimensional supergravity suggest extensions of these results to
interactions of higher order in the low energy expansion.Comment: harvmac. 41 pages. 3 figures. v2 typos corrected and reference list
updated. v3. Significant new subsection deriving the non-zero coefficient of
the IIB string theory three-loop contributio
Horava-Lifshitz modifications of the Casimir effect
We study the modifications induced by spacetime anisotropy on the Casimir
effect in the case of two parallel plates. Nonperturbative and perturbative
regimes are analyzed. In the first case the Casimir force either vanishes or it
reverses its direction which, in any case, makes the proposal untenable. On the
other hand, the perturbative model enables us to incorporate appropriately the
effects of spacetime anisotropy.Comment: 6 pages, revtex
Analytic calculations of trial wave functions of the fractional quantum Hall effect on the sphere
We present a framework for the analytic calculations of the hierarchical wave
functions and the composite fermion wave functions in the fractional quantum
Hall effect on the sphere by using projective coordinates. Then we calculate
the overlaps between these two wave functions at various fillings and small
numbers of electrons. We find that the overlaps are all most equal to one. This
gives a further evidence that two theories of the fractional quantum Hall
effect, the hierarchical theory and the composite fermion theory, are
physically equivalent.Comment: 37 pages, revte
Hierarchical wave function, Fock cyclic condition and spin-statistics relation in the spin-singlet fractional quantum Hall effect
We construct the hierarchical wave function of the spin-singlet fractional
quantum Hall effect, which turns out to satisfy Fock cyclic condition. The
spin-statistics relation of the quasi-particles in the spin-singlet fractional
quantum Hall effect is also discussed. Then we use particle-hole conjugation to
check the wave function.Comment: 23 pages, PHYZZ
- …