4,397 research outputs found
Thermodynamic Properties of Small Localized Black Holes
In a previous paper, we developed a numerical method to obtain a static black
hole localized on a 3-brane in the Randall-Sundrum infinite braneworld, and
presented examples of numerical solutions that describe small localized black
holes. In this paper we quantitatively analyze the behavior of the numerically
obtained black hole solutions, focusing on thermodynamic quantities. The
thermodynamic relations show that the localized black hole deviates smoothly
from a five-dimensional Schwarzschild black hole, which is a solution in the
limit of a small horizon radius. We compare the thermodynamic behavior of these
solutions with that of the exact solution on the 2-brane in the 4D braneworld.
We find similarities between them.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, RevTex, references adde
Money and price dynamics in a market with strategic bargaining
This paper studies a strategic bargaining model of money and prices to complement the results reported in Coles and Wright (1998). The probability of a bargaining breakdown is chosen to be consistent with market conditions in the spirit of Rubinstein and Wolinsky (1985). The unique monetary steady state coincides with the one under asymmetric Nash bargaining. The dynamics of the price level are determined without any reference to the value of search. The dynamic properties of the model resemble those of traditional monetary models.money, bargaining, price dynamics.
A global analysis of liquidity effects, interest rate rules, and deflationary traps
The prevailing models of liquidity traps suggest that a deflationary trap is a stable steady state in a multiple equilibria model. These models implicitly assume that the central bank accelerates the process of disinflation by following a Taylor rule even though there is a long run positive relationship between the nominal interest rate and inflation rate. This paper presents a reduced-form model that integrates liquidity effects into the analysis of interest rate rules to generalize the previous results about uniqueness, determinacy, and dynamic property of the economy.Taylor rules, liquidity effects, liquidity traps, deflation.
Induced Core Formation Time in Subcritical Magnetic Clouds by Large-Scale Trans-Alfv\'enic Flows
We clarify the mechanism of accelerated core formation by large-scale
nonlinear flows in subcritical magnetic clouds by finding a semi-analytical
formula for the core formation time and describing the physical processes that
lead to them. Recent numerical simulations show that nonlinear flows induce
rapid ambipolar diffusion that leads to localized supercritical regions that
can collapse. Here, we employ non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic simulations
including ambipolar diffusion for gravitationally stratified sheets threaded by
vertical magnetic fields. One of the horizontal dimensions is eliminated,
resulting in a simpler two-dimensional simulation that can clarify the basic
process of accelerated core formation. A parameter study of simulations shows
that the core formation time is inversely proportional to the square of the
flow speed when the flow speed is greater than the Alfv\'en speed. We find a
semi-analytical formula that explains this numerical result. The formula also
predicts that the core formation time is about three times shorter than that
with no turbulence, when the turbulent speed is comparable to the Alfv\'en
speed.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Properties of Kaluza-Klein black holes
We detail numerical methods to compute the geometry of static vacuum black
holes in 6 dimensional gravity compactified on a circle. We calculate
properties of these Kaluza-Klein black holes for varying mass, while keeping
the asymptotic compactification radius fixed. For increasing mass the horizon
deforms to a prolate ellipsoid, and the geometry near the horizon and axis
decompactifies. We are able to find solutions with horizon radii approximately
equal to the asymptotic compactification radius. Having chosen 6-dimensions, we
may compare these solutions to the non-uniform strings compactified on the same
radius of circle found in previous numerical work. We find the black holes
achieve larger masses and horizon volumes than the most non-uniform strings.
This sheds doubt on whether these solution branches can merge via a topology
changing solution. Further work is required to resolve whether there is a
maximum mass for the black holes, or whether the mass can become arbitrarily
large.Comment: 33 pages, 13 colour figures; v2 minor corrections and some figures
beautifie
Second order perturbations in the radius stabilized Randall-Sundrum two branes model II -- Effect of relaxing strong coupling approximation --
We discuss gravitational perturbations in the Randall-Sundrum two branes
model with radius stabilization. Following the idea by Goldberger and Wise for
the radius stabilization, we introduce a scalar field which has potentials
localized on the branes in addition to a bulk potential. In our previous paper
we discussed gravitational perturbations induced by static, spherically
symmetric and nonrelativistic matter distribution on the branes under the
condition that the values of the scalar field on the respective branes cannot
fluctuate due to its extremely narrow brane potentials. We call this case the
strong coupling limit. Our concern in this paper is to generalize our previous
analysis relaxing the limitation of taking the strong coupling limit. We find
that new corrections in metric perturbations due to relaxing the strong
coupling limit enhance the deviation from the 4D Einstein gravity only in some
exceptional cases. In the case that matter fields reside on the negative
tension brane, the stabilized radion mass becomes very small when the new
correction becomes large.Comment: 12 pages, No figures, typos correcte
Doubly Spinning Black Rings
We study a method to solve stationary axisymmetric vacuum Einstein equations
numerically. As an illustration, the five-dimensional doubly spinning black
rings that have two independent angular momenta are formulated in a way
suitable for fully nonlinear numerical method. Expanding for small second
angular velocity, the formulation is solved perturbatively upto second order
involving the backreaction from the second spin. The obtained solutions are
regular without conical singularity, and the physical properties are discussed
with the phase diagram of the reduced entropy vs the reduced angular momenta.
Possible extensions of the present approach to constructing the higher
dimensional version of black ring and the ring with the cosmological constant
are also discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
Optimal supply against fluctuating demand
Sornette et al. claimed that the optimal supply does not agree with the
average demand, by analyzing a bakery model where a daily demand fluctuates
with a uniform distribution. In this note, we extend the model to general
probability distributions, and obtain the formula of the optimal supply for
Gaussian distribution, which is more realistic. Our result is useful in a real
market to earn the largest income on average.Comment: 2 page
Probing anisotropies of gravitational-wave backgrounds with a space-based interferometer: geometric properties of antenna patterns and their angular power
We discuss the sensitivity to anisotropies of stochastic gravitational-wave
backgrounds (GWBs) observed via space-based interferometer. In addition to the
unresolved galactic binaries as the most promising GWB source of the planned
Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), the extragalactic sources for GWBs
might be detected in the future space missions. The anisotropies of the GWBs
thus play a crucial role to discriminate various components of the GWBs. We
study general features of antenna pattern sensitivity to the anisotropies of
GWBs beyond the low-frequency approximation. We show that the sensitivity of
space-based interferometer to GWBs is severely restricted by the data
combinations and the symmetries of the detector configuration. The spherical
harmonic analysis of the antenna pattern functions reveals that the angular
power of the detector response increases with frequency and the detectable
multipole moments with effective sensitivity h_{eff} \sim 10^{-20} Hz^{-1/2}
may reach 8-10 at mHz in the case of the single
LISA detector. However, the cross correlation of optimal interferometric
variables is blind to the monopole (\ell=0) intensity anisotropy, and also to
the dipole (\ell=1) in some case, irrespective of the frequency band. Besides,
all the self-correlated signals are shown to be blind to the odd multipole
moments (\ell=odd), independently of the frequency band.Comment: RevTex4, 22 pages, 6 figures (low resolution), typos correcte
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