1,035 research outputs found
Wiggling Throat of Extremal Black Holes
We construct the classical phase space of geometries in the near-horizon
region of vacuum extremal black holes as announced in [arXiv:1503.07861].
Motivated by the uniqueness theorems for such solutions and for perturbations
around them, we build a family of metrics depending upon a single periodic
function defined on the torus spanned by the isometry directions. We
show that this set of metrics is equipped with a consistent symplectic
structure and hence defines a phase space. The phase space forms a
representation of an infinite dimensional algebra of so-called symplectic
symmetries. The symmetry algebra is an extension of the Virasoro algebra whose
central extension is the black hole entropy. We motivate the choice of
diffeomorphisms leading to the phase space and explicitly derive the symplectic
structure, the algebra of symplectic symmetries and the corresponding conserved
charges. We also discuss a formulation of these charges with a Liouville type
stress-tensor on the torus defined by the isometries and outline
possible future directions.Comment: 56 pages, 3 figure
Symplectic and Killing Symmetries of AdS Gravity: Holographic vs Boundary Gravitons
The set of solutions to the AdS Einstein gravity with Brown-Henneaux
boundary conditions is known to be a family of metrics labeled by two arbitrary
periodic functions, respectively left and right-moving. It turns out that there
exists an appropriate presymplectic form which vanishes on-shell. This promotes
this set of metrics to a phase space in which the Brown-Henneaux asymptotic
symmetries become symplectic symmetries in the bulk of spacetime. Moreover, any
element in the phase space admits two global Killing vectors. We show that the
conserved charges associated with these Killing vectors commute with the
Virasoro symplectic symmetry algebra, extending the Virasoro symmetry algebra
with two generators. We discuss that any element in the phase space
falls into the coadjoint orbits of the Virasoro algebras and that each orbit is
labeled by the Killing charges. Upon setting the right-moving function
to zero and restricting the choice of orbits, one can take a near-horizon
decoupling limit which preserves a chiral half of the symplectic symmetries.
Here we show two distinct but equivalent ways in which the chiral Virasoro
symplectic symmetries in the near-horizon geometry can be obtained as a limit
of the bulk symplectic symmetries.Comment: 39 pages, v2: a reference added, the version to appear in JHE
Extremal Rotating Black Holes in the Near-Horizon Limit: Phase Space and Symmetry Algebra
We construct the NHEG phase space, the classical phase space of Near-Horizon
Extremal Geometries with fixed angular momenta and entropy, and with the
largest symmetry algebra. We focus on vacuum solutions to dimensional
Einstein gravity. Each element in the phase space is a geometry with
isometries which has vanishing and constant charges. We construct an on-shell vanishing symplectic
structure, which leads to an infinite set of symplectic symmetries. In four
spacetime dimensions, the phase space is unique and the symmetry algebra
consists of the familiar Virasoro algebra, while in dimensions the
symmetry algebra, the NHEG algebra, contains infinitely many Virasoro
subalgebras. The nontrivial central term of the algebra is proportional to the
black hole entropy. This phase space and in particular its symmetries might
serve as a basis for a semiclassical description of extremal rotating black
hole microstates.Comment: Published in PLB, 5 page
Dynamical heterogeneity in aging colloidal glasses of Laponite
Glasses behave as solids due to their long relaxation time; however the
origin of this slow response remains a puzzle. Growing dynamic length scales
due to cooperative motion of particles are believed to be central to the
understanding of both the slow dynamics and the emergence of rigidity. Here, we
provide experimental evidence of a growing dynamical heterogeneity length scale
that increases with increasing waiting time in an aging colloidal glass of
Laponite. The signature of heterogeneity in the dynamics follows from dynamic
light scattering measurements in which we study both the rotational and
translational diffusion of the disk-shaped particles of Laponite in suspension.
These measurements are accompanied by simultaneous microrheology and
macroscopic rheology experiments. We find that rotational diffusion of
particles slows down at a faster rate than their translational motion. Such
decoupling of translational and orientational degrees of freedom finds its
origin in the dynamic heterogeneity since rotation and translation probe
different length scales in the sample. The macroscopic rheology experiments
show that the low frequency shear viscosity increases at a much faster rate
than both rotational and translational diffusive relaxation times.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, Accepted in Soft Matter 201
Aging of rotational diffusion in colloidal gels and glasses
We study the rotational diffusion of aging Laponite suspensions for a wide
range of concentrations using depolarized dynamic light scattering. The
measured orientational correlation functions undergo an ergodic to non-ergodic
transition that is characterized by a concentration-dependent
ergodicity-breaking time. We find that the relaxation times associated with
rotational degree of freedom as a function of waiting time, when scaled with
their ergodicity-breaking time, collapse on two distinct master curves. These
master curves are similar to those previously found for the translational
dynamics; The two different classes of behavior were attributed to colloidal
gels and glasses. Therefore, the aging dynamics of rotational degree of freedom
provides another signature of the distinct dynamical behavior of colloidal gels
and glasses.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Black Hole Statistics from Holography
We study the microstates of the ``small'' black hole in the \half-BPS
sector of AdS, the superstar of Myers and Tafjord, using the
powerful holographic description provided by LLM. The system demonstrates the
inherently statistical nature of black holes, with the geometry of Myer and
Tafjord emerging only after averaging over an ensemble of geometries. The
individual microstate geometries differ in the highly non-trivial topology of a
quantum foam at their core, and the entropy can be understood as a partition of
units of flux among 5-cycles, as required by flux quantization. While the
system offers confirmation of the most controversial aspect of Mathur and
Lunin's recent ``fuzzball'' proposal, we see signs of a discrepancy in
interpreting its details.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures; References adde
An Arena for Model Building in the Cohen-Glashow Very Special Relativity
The Cohen-Glashow Very Special Relativity (VSR) algebra
[arXiv:hep-ph/0601236] is defined as the part of the Lorentz algebra which upon
addition of CP or T invariance enhances to the full Lorentz group, plus the
space-time translations. We show that noncommutative space-time, in particular
noncommutative Moyal plane, with light-like noncommutativity provides a robust
mathematical setting for quantum field theories which are VSR invariant and
hence set the stage for building VSR invariant particle physics models. In our
setting the VSR invariant theories are specified with a single deformation
parameter, the noncommutativity scale \Lambda_{NC}. Preliminary analysis with
the available data leads to \Lambda_{NC}\gtrsim 1-10 TeV.
This note is prepared for the Proceedings of the G27 Mathematical Physics
Conference, Yerevan 2008, and is based on arXiv:0806.3699[hep-th].Comment: Presented by M.M.Sh-J. in the G27 Mathematical Physics Conference,
Yerevan 2008 as the 4th Weyl Prize Ceremony Tal
Pressed and sintered AISI 4140 PM low alloy steel from gas atomised powders
This paper is based on a presentation at Euro PM 2012 organised by EPMA in Basel, Switzerland on 16–19 September 2012In conventional PM of low alloy steels various alloying routes are used (fully prealloyed powders, diffusion alloying, elemental powders), but always using powders that allow uniaxial pressing, i.e. acceptable compressibility and flow. Fully prealloyed gas atomised powders (including carbon content) have never been an option because their small size. These powders need to be granulated before being uniaxially pressed and the binder used in the granulating process must be eliminated in the first steps of the sintering cycle. Such a processing route is proposed and initial results presented. A potential advantage of the process is that a low particle size can activate the sintering performance, bringing energy and cost savings over the full process cycle.Publicad
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