544 research outputs found
Phase transitions and critical behavior of black branes in canonical ensemble
We study the thermodynamics and phase structure of asymptotically flat
non-dilatonic as well as dilatonic black branes in a cavity in arbitrary
dimensions (). We consider the canonical ensemble and so the charge inside
the cavity and the temperature at the wall are fixed. We analyze the stability
of the black brane equilibrium states and derive the phase structures. For the
zero charge case we find an analog of Hawking-Page phase transition for these
black branes in arbitrary dimensions. When the charge is non-zero, we find that
below a critical value of the charge, the phase diagram has a line of
first-order phase transition in a certain range of temperatures which ends up
at a second order phase transition point (critical point) as the charge attains
the critical value. We calculate the critical exponents at that critical point.
Although our discussion is mainly concerned with the non-dilatonic branes, we
show how it easily carries over to the dilatonic branes as well.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures, the validity of using the effective action
discussed, references adde
Quantum Criticality and Holographic Superconductors in M-theory
We present a consistent Kaluza-Klein truncation of D=11 supergravity on an
arbitrary seven-dimensional Sasaki-Einstein space (SE_7) to a D=4 theory
containing a metric, a gauge-field, a complex scalar field and a real scalar
field. We use this D=4 theory to construct various black hole solutions that
describe the thermodynamics of the d=3 CFTs dual to skew-whiffed AdS_4 X SE_7
solutions. We show that these CFTs have a rich phase diagram, including
holographic superconductivity with, generically, broken parity and time
reversal invariance. At zero temperature the superconducting solutions are
charged domain walls with a universal emergent conformal symmetry in the far
infrared.Comment: 52 pages, 16 figures, 3 appendices; minor changes, version to be
published in JHE
Phase structure of black branes in grand canonical ensemble
This is a companion paper of our previous work [1] where we studied the
thermodynamics and phase structure of asymptotically flat black -branes in a
cavity in arbitrary dimensions in a canonical ensemble. In this work we
study the thermodynamics and phase structure of the same in a grand canonical
ensemble. Since the boundary data in two cases are different (for the grand
canonical ensemble boundary potential is fixed instead of the charge as in
canonical ensemble) the stability analysis and the phase structure in the two
cases are quite different. In particular, we find that there exists an analog
of one-variable analysis as in canonical ensemble, which gives the same
stability condition as the rather complicated known (but generalized from black
holes to the present case) two-variable analysis. When certain condition for
the fixed potential is satisfied, the phase structure of charged black
-branes is in some sense similar to that of the zero charge black -branes
in canonical ensemble up to a certain temperature. The new feature in the
present case is that above this temperature, unlike the zero-charge case, the
stable brane phase no longer exists and `hot flat space' is the stable phase
here. In the grand canonical ensemble there is an analog of Hawking-Page
transition, even for the charged black -brane, as opposed to the canonical
ensemble. Our study applies to non-dilatonic as well as dilatonic black
-branes in space-time dimensions.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figures, various points refined, discussion expanded,
references updated, typos corrected, published in JHEP 1105:091,201
Supersymmetric geometries of IIA supergravity I
IIA supergravity backgrounds preserving one supersymmetry locally admit four
types of Killing spinors distinguished by the orbits of on the
space of spinors. We solve the Killing spinor equations of IIA supergravity
with and without cosmological constant for Killing spinors representing two of
these orbits, with isotropy groups and .
In both cases, we identify the geometry of spacetime and express the fluxes in
terms of the geometry. We find that the geometric constraints of backgrounds
with a invariant Killing spinor are identical to
those found for heterotic backgrounds preserving one supersymmetry.Comment: 21 page
Drowning is an apparent and unexpected recurrent cause of mass mortality of Common starlings (Sturnus vulgaris
Drowning is infrequently reported as a cause of death of wild birds and such incidents typically involve individual, rather than multiple, birds. Over a 21-year period (1993 to 2013 inclusive), we investigated 12 incidents of mortality of multiple (2 − 80+) Common starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) in Great Britain that appeared to be due to drowning. More than ten birds were affected in ten of these reported incidents. These incidents always occurred during the spring and early summer months and usually involved juvenile birds. In all cases, circumstantial evidence and post-mortem examinations indicated drowning to be the most likely cause of death with no underlying disease found. A behavioural explanation seems likely, possibly related to the gregarious nature of this species combined with juvenile inexperience in identifying water hazards. A review of data from the ringed bird recovery scheme across Great Britain (1909–2013 inclusive) of both starlings and Common blackbirds (Turdus merula), also a common garden visitor, identified additional suspected drowning incidents, which were significantly more common in the former species, supporting a species predisposition to drowning. For each species there was a marked seasonal peak from April to August. Drowning should be included as a differential diagnosis when investigating incidents of multiple starling mortality, especially of juveniles
Squirrelpox virus: assessing prevalence, transmission and environmental degradation
Red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) declined in Great Britain and Ireland during the last century, due to habitat loss and the introduction of grey squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis), which competitively exclude the red squirrel and act as a reservoir for squirrelpox virus (SQPV). The disease is generally fatal to red squirrels and their ecological replacement by grey squirrels is up to 25 times faster where the virus is present. We aimed to determine: (1) the seropositivity and prevalence of SQPV DNA in the invasive and native species at a regional scale; (2) possible SQPV transmission routes; and, (3) virus degradation rates under differing environmental conditions. Grey (n = 208) and red (n = 40) squirrel blood and tissues were sampled. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) techniques established seropositivity and viral DNA presence, respectively. Overall 8% of squirrels sampled (both species combined) had evidence of SQPV DNA in their tissues and 22% were in possession of antibodies. SQPV prevalence in sampled red squirrels was 2.5%. Viral loads were typically low in grey squirrels by comparison to red squirrels. There was a trend for a greater number of positive samples in spring and summer than in winter. Possible transmission routes were identified through the presence of viral DNA in faeces (red squirrels only), urine and ectoparasites (both species). Virus degradation analyses suggested that, after 30 days of exposure to six combinations of environments, there were more intact virus particles in scabs kept in warm (25°C) and dry conditions than in cooler (5 and 15°C) or wet conditions. We conclude that SQPV is present at low prevalence in invasive grey squirrel populations with a lower prevalence in native red squirrels. Virus transmission could occur through urine especially during warm dry summer conditions but, more notably, via ectoparasites, which are shared by both species
Universality and exactness of Schrodinger geometries in string and M-theory
We propose an organizing principle for classifying and constructing
Schrodinger-invariant solutions within string theory and M-theory, based on the
idea that such solutions represent nonlinear completions of linearized vector
and graviton Kaluza-Klein excitations of AdS compactifications. A crucial
simplification, derived from the symmetry of AdS, is that the nonlinearities
appear only quadratically. Accordingly, every AdS vacuum admits infinite
families of Schrodinger deformations parameterized by the dynamical exponent z.
We exhibit the ease of finding these solutions by presenting three new
constructions: two from M5 branes, both wrapped and extended, and one from the
D1-D5 (and S-dual F1-NS5) system. From the boundary perspective, perturbing a
CFT by a null vector operator can lead to nonzero beta-functions for spin-2
operators; however, symmetry restricts them to be at most quadratic in
couplings. This point of view also allows us to easily prove nonrenormalization
theorems: for any Sch(z) solution of two-derivative supergravity constructed in
the above manner, z is uncorrected to all orders in higher derivative
corrections if the deforming KK mode lies in a short multiplet of an AdS
supergroup. Furthermore, we find infinite classes of 1/4 BPS solutions with
4-,5- and 7-dimensional Schrodinger symmetry that are exact.Comment: 31 pages, plus appendices; v2, minor corrections, added refs, slight
change in interpretation in section 2.3, new Schrodinger and Lifshitz
solutions included; v3, clarifications in sections 2 and 3 regarding
existence of solutions and multi-trace operator
Behavioral Adaptations of Nursing Brangus Cows to Virtual Fencing: Insights from a Training Deployment Phase
Virtual fencing systems have emerged as a promising technology for managing the distribution of livestock in extensive grazing environments. This study provides comprehensive documentation of the learning process involving two conditional behavioral mechanisms and the documentation of efficient, effective, and safe animal training for virtual fence applications on nursing Brangus cows. Two hypotheses were examined: (1) animals would learn to avoid restricted zones by increasing their use of containment zones within a virtual fence polygon, and (2) animals would progressively receive fewer audio-electric cues over time and increasingly rely on auditory cues for behavioral modification. Data from GPS coordinates, behavioral metrics derived from the collar data, and cueing events were analyzed to evaluate these hypotheses. The results supported hypothesis 1, revealing that virtual fence activation significantly increased the time spent in containment zones and reduced time in restricted zones compared to when the virtual fence was deactivated. Concurrently, behavioral metrics mirrored these findings, with cows adjusting their daily travel distances, exploration area, and cumulative activity counts in response to the allocation of areas with different virtual fence configurations. Hypothesis 2 was also supported by the results, with a decrease in cueing events over time and increased reliance with animals on audio cueing to avert receiving the mild electric pulse. These outcomes underscore the rapid learning capabilities of groups of nursing cows in responding to virtual fence boundaries
M-theory moduli spaces and torsion-free structures
Motivated by the description of M-theory compactifications to
four-dimensions given by Exceptional Generalized Geometry, we propose a way to
geometrize the M-theory fluxes by appropriately relating the compactification
space to a higher-dimensional manifold equipped with a torsion-free structure.
As a non-trivial example of this proposal, we construct a bijection from the
set of -structures on an eight-dimensional -bundle to the set
of -structures on the base space, fully characterizing the
-torsion clases when the total space is equipped with a torsion-free
-structure. Finally, we elaborate on how the higher-dimensional
manifold and its moduli space of torsion-free structures can be used to obtain
information about the moduli space of M-theory compactifications.Comment: 24 pages. Typos fixed. Minor clarifications adde
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