15,597 research outputs found
On the gravitational stability of D1-D5-P black holes
We examine the stability of the nonextremal D1-D5-P black hole solutions. In
particular, we look for the appearance of a superradiant instability for the
spinning black holes but we find no evidence of such an instability. We compare
this situation with that for the smooth soliton geometries, which were recently
observed to suffer from an ergoregion instability, and consider the
implications for the fuzzball proposal.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures. Minor comments added to match published versio
New gravitational solutions via a Riemann-Hilbert approach
We consider the Riemann-Hilbert factorization approach to solving the field
equations of dimensionally reduced gravity theories. First we prove that
functions belonging to a certain class possess a canonical factorization due to
properties of the underlying spectral curve. Then we use this result, together
with appropriate matricial decompositions, to study the canonical factorization
of non-meromorphic monodromy matrices that describe deformations of seed
monodromy matrices associated with known solutions. This results in new
solutions, with unusual features, to the field equations.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figures; v2: reference added, matches published versio
The return of the membrane paradigm? Black holes and strings in the water tap
Several general arguments indicate that the event horizon behaves as a
stretched membrane. We propose using this relation to understand gravity and
dynamics of black objects in higher dimensions. We provide evidence that (i)
the gravitational Gregory-Laflamme instability has a classical counterpart in
the Rayleigh-Plateau instability of fluids. Each known feature of the
gravitational instability can be accounted for in the fluid model. These
features include threshold mode, dispersion relation, time evolution and
critical dimension of certain phase transitions. Thus, we argue that black
strings break in much the same way as water from a faucet breaks up into small
droplets. (ii) General rotating black holes can also be understood with this
analogy. In particular, instability and bifurcation diagrams for black objects
can easily be inferred. This correspondence can and should be used as a guiding
tool to understand and explore physics of gravity in higher dimensions.Comment: This essay received an honorable mention in the Gravity Research
Foundation Essay Competition, 2007. v2: Published versio
Aroeira, cultura e agricultura: reflexões que embasam a necessidade de uma educação ambiental rural para uma percepção social agroecológica.
bitstream/item/35351/1/documento-245.pd
Van der Waals spin valves
We propose spin valves where a 2D non-magnetic conductor is intercalated
between two ferromagnetic insulating layers. In this setup, the relative
orientation of the magnetizations of the insulating layers can have a strong
impact on the in-plane conductivity of the 2D conductor. We first show this for
a graphene bilayer, described with a tight-binding model, placed between two
ferromagnetic insulators. In the anti-parallel configuration, a band gap opens
at the Dirac point, whereas in the parallel configuration, the graphene bilayer
remains conducting. We then compute the electronic structure of graphene
bilayer placed between two monolayers of the ferromagnetic insulator CrI,
using density functional theory. Consistent with the model, we find that a gap
opens at the Dirac point only in the antiparallel configuration.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Automatic speaker segmentation using multiple features and distance measures: a comparison of three approaches
This paper addresses the problem of unsupervised speaker change detection. Three systems based on the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) are tested. The first system investigates the AudioSpectrumCentroid and the AudioWaveformEnvelope features, implements a dynamic thresholding followed by a fusion scheme, and finally applies BIC. The second method is a real-time one that uses a metric-based approach employing the line spectral pairs and the BIC to validate a potential speaker change point. The third method consists of three modules. In the first module, a measure based on second-order statistics is used; in the second module, the Euclidean distance and T2 Hotelling statistic are applied; and in the third module, the BIC is utilized. The experiments are carried out on a dataset created by concatenating speakers from the TIMIT database, that is referred to as the TIMIT data set. A comparison between the performance of the three systems is made based on t-statistics
A Complex Case of Cholestasis in a Patient with ABCB4 and ABCB11 Mutations
The low-phospholipid-associated cholelithiasis (LPAC) syndrome is a form of symptomatic cholelithiasis occurring in young adults, characterized by recurrence of symptoms after cholecystectomy and presence of hepatolithiasis. The case refers to a healthy 39-year-old Caucasian male who presented with abdominal pain and jaundice. His blood tests showed conjugated hyperbilirubinemia and elevated liver enzymes (total bilirubin 6.65 mg/dL, Îł-glutamyltransferase 699 IU/L) and abdominal computed tomography revealed dilation of common bile duct and left intrahepatic ducts. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography identified choledocholithiasis, retrieved by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, after which there was a worsening of jaundice (total bilirubin 23 mg/dL), which persisted for several weeks, possibly due to ciprofloxacin toxicity. After an extensive workup including liver biopsy, the identification of two foci of hepatolithiasis on reevaluation abdominal ultrasound raised the hypothesis of LPAC syndrome and the patient was started on ursodeoxycholic acid, with remarkable improvement. Genetic testing identified the mutation c.1954A>G (p.Arg652Gly) in ABCB4 gene (homozygous) and c.1331T>C (p.Val444Ala) in ABCB11 gene (heterozygous). In conclusion, we describe the unique case of an adult male with choledocholithiasis, hepatolithiasis, and persistent conjugated hyperbilirubinemia after retrieval of stones, fulfilling the criteria for LPAC syndrome and with possible superimposed drug-induced liver injury, in whom ABCB4 and ABCB11 mutations were found, both of which had not been previously described in association with LPAC.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Classical instability of Kerr-AdS black holes and the issue of final state
It is now established that small Kerr-Anti-de Sitter (Kerr-AdS) black holes
are unstable against scalar perturbations, via superradiant amplification
mechanism. We show that small Kerr-AdS black holes are also unstable against
gravitational perturbations and we compute the features of this instability. We
also describe with great detail the evolution of this instability. In
particular, we identify its endpoint state. It corresponds to a Kerr-AdS black
hole whose boundary is an Einstein universe rotating with the light velocity.
This black hole is expected to be slightly oblate and to co-exist in
equilibrium with a certain amount of outside radiation.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex4. v2: small typos corrected. Version to appear in
Phys. Rev.
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