116 research outputs found
Kappa symmetric OSp(2|2) WZNW model
We construct a kappa symmetric WZNW model for the OSp(2|2) supergroup, whose
bosonic part is AdS3xS1 space. The field equation gives the chiral current
conservation and the right/left factorization is shown after the kappa symmetry
is fixed. The right-moving modes contain both bosons and fermions while the
left-moving modes contain only bosons.Comment: 18 pages; reference and comments added, version to appear in JHE
Thermodynamics of a Kerr Newman de Sitter Black Hole
We compute the conserved quantities of the four-dimensional Kerr-Newman-dS
(KNdS) black hole through the use of the counterterm renormalization method,
and obtain a generalized Smarr formula for the mass as a function of the
entropy, the angular momentum and the electric charge. The first law of
thermodynamics associated to the cosmological horizon of KNdS is also
investigated. Using the minimal number of intrinsic boundary counterterms, we
consider the quasilocal thermodynamics of asymptotic de Sitter
Reissner-Nordstrom black hole, and find that the temperature is equal to the
product of the surface gravity (divided by ) and the Tolman redshift
factor. We also perform a quasilocal stability analysis by computing the
determinant of Hessian matrix of the energy with respect to its thermodynamic
variables in both the canonical and the grand-canonical ensembles and obtain a
complete set of phase diagrams. We then turn to the quasilocal thermodynamics
of four-dimensional Kerr-Newman-de Sitter black hole for virtually all possible
values of the mass, the rotation and the charge parameters that leave the
quasilocal boundary inside the cosmological event horizon, and perform a
quasilocal stability analysis of KNdS black hole.Comment: REVTEX4, 12 pages, 12 figures, references added and some points in
Sec II have been clarified, version to appear in Can. J. Phy
Fundamental Superstrings as Holograms
The worldsheet of a macroscopic fundamental superstring in the Green-Schwarz
light-cone gauge is viewed as a possible boundary hologram of the near horizon
region of a small black string. For toroidally compactified strings, the
hologram has global symmetries of AdS_3 \times S^{d-1} \times T^{8-d}, (d
=3,..,8), only some of which extend to local conformal symmetries. We construct
the bulk string theory in detail for the particular case of d=3. The symmetries
of the hologram are correctly reproduced from this exact worldsheet description
in the bulk. Moreover, the central charge of the boundary Virasoro algebra
obtained from the bulk agrees with the Wald entropy of the associated small
black holes. This construction provides an exact CFT description of the near
horizon region of small black holes both in Type-II and heterotic string theory
arising from multiply wound fundamental superstrings.Comment: 46 pages, JHEP style. v2: Comments, references adde
Gauge Theory and the Excision of Repulson Singularities
We study brane configurations that give rise to large-N gauge theories with
eight supersymmetries and no hypermultiplets. These configurations include a
variety of wrapped, fractional, and stretched branes or strings. The
corresponding spacetime geometries which we study have a distinct kind of
singularity known as a repulson. We find that this singularity is removed by a
distinctive mechanism, leaving a smooth geometry with a core having an enhanced
gauge symmetry. The spacetime geometry can be related to large-N Seiberg-Witten
theory.Comment: 31 pages LaTeX, 2 figures (v3: references added
Near the horizon of 5D black rings
For the five dimensional N=2 black rings, we study the supersymmetry
enhancement and identify the global supergroup of the near horizon geometry. We
show that the global part of the supergroup is OSp(4*|2)X U(1) which is similar
to the small black string. We show that results obtained by applying the
entropy function formalism, the c-extremization approach and the Brown-Henneaux
method to the black ring solution are in agreement with the microscopic entropy
calculation.Comment: 26 pages, version to appear in JHEP, the near horizon superalgebra is
corrected, discussion on small black ring is discarded, Brown-Henneaux
approach to large black ring is adde
Localized modes at a D-brane--O-plane intersection and heterotic Alice strings
We study a system of -branes intersecting -branes and
-planes in 1+1-dimensions. We use anomaly cancellation and string dualities
to argue that there must be chiral fermion zero-modes on the -branes which
are localized near the -planes. Away from the orientifold limit we verify
this by using index theory as well as explicit construction of the zero-modes.
This system is related to F-theory on K3 and heterotic matrix string theory,
and the heterotic strings are related to Alice string defects in
Super-Yang-Mills. In the limit of large we find an
dual of the heterotic matrix string CFT.Comment: 44 pages, typos corrected, version published in JHE
String Theoretic Bounds on Lorentz-Violating Warped Compactification
We consider warped compactifications that solve the 10 dimensional
supergravity equations of motion at a point, stabilize the position of a
D3-brane world, and admit a warp factor that violates Lorentz invariance along
the brane. This gives a string embedding of ``asymmetrically warped'' models
which we use to calculate stringy (\alpha') corrections to standard model
dispersion relations, paying attention to the maximum speeds for different
particles. We find, from the dispersion relations, limits on gravitational
Lorentz violation in these models, improving on current limits on the speed of
graviton propagation, including those derived from field theoretic loops. We
comment on the viability of models that use asymmetric warping for self-tuning
of the brane cosmological constant.Comment: 20pg, JHEP3; v2 additional references, slight change to intro; v3.
added referenc
Identifying topological edge states in 2D optical lattices using light scattering
We recently proposed in a Letter [Physical Review Letters 108 255303] a novel
scheme to detect topological edge states in an optical lattice, based on a
generalization of Bragg spectroscopy. The scope of the present article is to
provide a more detailed and pedagogical description of the system - the
Hofstadter optical lattice - and probing method. We first show the existence of
topological edge states, in an ultra-cold gas trapped in a 2D optical lattice
and subjected to a synthetic magnetic field. The remarkable robustness of the
edge states is verified for a variety of external confining potentials. Then,
we describe a specific laser probe, made from two lasers in Laguerre-Gaussian
modes, which captures unambiguous signatures of these edge states. In
particular, the resulting Bragg spectra provide the dispersion relation of the
edge states, establishing their chiral nature. In order to make the Bragg
signal experimentally detectable, we introduce a "shelving method", which
simultaneously transfers angular momentum and changes the internal atomic
state. This scheme allows to directly visualize the selected edge states on a
dark background, offering an instructive view on topological insulating phases,
not accessible in solid-state experiments.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. Revised and extended version, to appear in EJP
Special Topic for the special issue on "Novel Quantum Phases and Mesoscopic
Physics in Quantum Gases". Extended version of arXiv:1203.124
Quest for Localized 4-D Black Holes in Brane Worlds
We investigate the possibility of obtaining localized black hole solutions in
brane worlds by introducing a dependence of the four-dimensional line--element
on the extra dimension. An analysis, performed for the cases of an empty bulk
and of a bulk containing either a scalar or a gauge field, reveals that no
conventional type of matter can support such a dependence. Considering a
particular ansatz for the five-dimensional line--element that corresponds to a
black hole solution with a ``decaying'' horizon, we determine the bulk
energy--momentum tensor capable of sustaining such a behaviour. It turns out
that an exotic, shell-like distribution of matter is required. For such
solutions, the black hole singularity is indeed localized near the brane and
the spacetime is well defined near the AdS horizon, in contrast to the
behaviour found in black string type solutions.Comment: 17 pages, RevTex, 3 figures, version to appear in Physical Review D,
comments and references added, typos correcte
What we don't know about time
String theory has transformed our understanding of geometry, topology and
spacetime. Thus, for this special issue of Foundations of Physics commemorating
"Forty Years of String Theory", it seems appropriate to step back and ask what
we do not understand. As I will discuss, time remains the least understood
concept in physical theory. While we have made significant progress in
understanding space, our understanding of time has not progressed much beyond
the level of a century ago when Einstein introduced the idea of space-time as a
combined entity. Thus, I will raise a series of open questions about time, and
will review some of the progress that has been made as a roadmap for the
future.Comment: 15 pages; Essay for a special issue of Foundations of Physics
commemorating "Forty years of string theory
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