585 research outputs found
Unstable vortices do not confine
Recently, a geometric model for the confinement of magnetic charges in the
context of type II string compactifications was constructed by Greene, Morrison
and Vafa. This model assumes the existence of stable magnetic vortices with
quantized flux in the low energy theory. However, quantization of flux alone
does not imply that the vortex is stable, since the flux may not be confined to
a tube of definite size. We show that in the field theoretical model which
underlies the geometric model of confinement, static, cylindrically symmetric
magnetic vortices do not exist. While our results do not preclude the existence
of confinement in a different low-energy regime of string theory, they show
that confinement is not a universal outcome of the string picture, and its
origin in the low energy theory remains to be understood.Comment: Latex, 8 page
Social Learning and Networking : How multiple actors can learn through joint analysis, dialogue and co-creation
We are facing complex societal problems such as climate change, human conflict, poverty and inequality, and need innovative solutions. Multi-stakeholder processes (MSPs) are more and more seen as a critical way of coming to such innovative solutions. It is thought that when multiple stakeholders are able to meet, share experiences, learn together and contribute to decisions, new and innovative ways of dealing with problems are found and turned into action. Still, much remains to be understood about the role and effectiveness of social learning in multi-stakeholder settings. This report summarizes the deliberations of the seminar “Social learning and networking: How multiple actors can learn through joint analysis, dialogue and co-creation”, which was held in Wageningen on 16 September 2010
How Does the Choice of the Lower Boundary Conditions in Large-Eddy Simulations Affect the Development of Dispersive Fluxes Near the Surface?
Large-eddy simulations (LES) are an important tool for investigating the longstanding energy-balance-closure problem, as they provide continuous, spatially-distributed information about turbulent flow at a high temporal resolution. Former LES studies reproduced an energy-balance gap similar to the observations in the field typically amounting to 10–30% for heights on the order of 100 m in convective boundary layers even above homogeneous surfaces. The underestimation is caused by dispersive fluxes associated with large-scale turbulent organized structures that are not captured by single-tower measurements. However, the gap typically vanishes near the surface, i.e. at typical eddy-covariance measurement heights below 20 m, contrary to the findings from field measurements. In this study, we aim to find a LES set-up that can represent the correct magnitude of the energy-balance gap close to the surface. Therefore, we use a nested two-way coupled LES, with a fine grid that allows us to resolve fluxes and atmospheric structures at typical eddy-covariance measurement heights of 20 m. Under different stability regimes we compare three different options for lower boundary conditions featuring grassland and forest surfaces, i.e. (1) prescribed surface fluxes, (2) a land-surface model, and (3) a land-surface model in combination with a resolved canopy. We show that the use of prescribed surface fluxes and a land-surface model yields similar dispersive heat fluxes that are very small near the vegetation top for both grassland and forest surfaces. However, with the resolved forest canopy, dispersive heat fluxes are clearly larger, which we explain by a clear impact of the resolved canopy on the relationship between variance and flux–variance similarity functions
Global-scale regionalization of hydrologic model parameters
Current state-of-the-art models typically applied at continental to global scales (hereafter called macroscale) tend to use a priori parameters, resulting in suboptimal streamflow (Q) simulation. For the first time, a scheme for regionalization of model parameters at the global scale was developed. We used data from a diverse set of 1787 small-to-medium sized catchments ( 10-10,000 km(2)) and the simple conceptual HBV model to set up and test the scheme. Each catchment was calibrated against observed daily Q, after which 674 catchments with high calibration and validation scores, and thus presumably good-quality observed Q and forcing data, were selected to serve as donor catchments. The calibrated parameter sets for the donors were subsequently transferred to 0.5 degrees grid cells with similar climatic and physiographic characteristics, resulting in parameter maps for HBV with global coverage. For each grid cell, we used the 10 most similar donor catchments, rather than the single most similar donor, and averaged the resulting simulated Q, which enhanced model performance. The 1113 catchments not used as donors were used to independently evaluate the scheme. The regionalized parameters outperformed spatially uniform (i.e., averaged calibrated) parameters for 79% of the evaluation catchments. Substantial improvements were evident for all major Koppen-Geiger climate types and even for evaluation catchments>5000 km distant from the donors. The median improvement was about half of the performance increase achieved through calibration. HBV with regionalized parameters outperformed nine state-of-the-art macroscale models, suggesting these might also benefit from the new regionalization scheme. The produced HBV parameter maps including ancillary data are available via
Potential and mass-matrix in gauged N=4 supergravity
We discuss the potential and mass-matrix of gauged N=4 matter coupled
supergravity for the case of six matter multiplets, extending previous work by
considering the dependence on all scalars. We consider all semi-simple gauge
groups and analyse the potential and its first and second derivatives in the
origin of the scalar manifold. Although we find in a number of cases an
extremum with a positive cosmological constant, these are not stable under
fluctuations of all scalar fields.Comment: 28 pages, LaTe
Scaling Cosmologies of N=8 Gauged Supergravity
We construct exact cosmological scaling solutions in N=8 gauged supergravity.
We restrict to solutions for which the scalar fields trace out geodesic curves
on the scalar manifold. Under these restrictions it is shown that the axionic
scalars are necessarily constant. The potential is then a sum of exponentials
and has a very specific form that allows for scaling solutions. The scaling
solutions describe eternal accelerating and decelerating power-law universes,
which are all unstable. An uplift of the solutions to 11-dimensional
supergravity is carried out and the resulting timedependent geometries are
discussed. In the discussion we briefly comment on the fact that N=2 gauged
supergravity allows stable scaling solutions.Comment: 17 pages; referenced added, reportnr changed and some corrections in
section
More on Membranes in Matrix Theory
We study noncompact and static membrane solutions in Matrix theory. Demanding
axial symmetry on a membrane embedded in three spatial dimensions, we obtain a
wormhole solution whose shape is the same with the catenoidal solution of
Born-Infeld theory. We also discuss another interesting class of solutions,
membranes embedded holomorphically in four spatial dimensions, which are 1/4
BPS.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX; expanded to treat matrix membrane solutions with
electric flux, equivalently fundamental strings; to appear in Phys. Rev.
The minimal N=4 no-scale model from generalized dimensional reduction
We consider the generalized dimensional reduction of pure ungauged N=4, D=5
supergravity, where supersymmetry is spontaneously broken to N=2 or N=0 with
identically vanishing scalar potential. We explicitly construct the resulting
gauged D=4 theory coupled to a single vector multiplet, which provides the
minimal N=4 realization of a no-scale model. We discuss its relation with the
standard classification of N=4 gaugings, extensions to non-compact twists and
to higher dimensions, the N=2 theories obtained via consistent Z_2 orbifold
projections and prospects for further generalizations.Comment: 1+28 pages, no figures, JHEP3 LaTeX, published versio
The R-map and the Coupling of N=2 Tensor Multiplets in 5 and 4 Dimensions
We study the dimensional reduction of five dimensional N=2
Yang-Mills-Einstein supergravity theories (YMESGT) coupled to tensor
multiplets. The resulting 4D theories involve first order interactions among
tensor and vector fields with mass terms. If the 5D gauge group, K, does not
mix the 5D tensor and vector fields, the 4D tensor fields can be integrated out
in favor of 4D vector fields and the resulting theory is dual to a standard 4D
YMESGT. The gauge group has a block diagonal symplectic embedding and is a
semi-direct product of the 5D gauge group K with a Heisenberg group of
dimension (2P+1), where 2P is the number of tensor fields in five dimensions.
There exists an infinite family of theories, thus obtained, whose gauge groups
are pp-wave contractions of the simple noncompact groups of type SO*(2M). If,
on the other hand, the 5D gauge group does mix the 5D tensor and vector fields,
the resulting 4D theory is dual to a 4D YMESGT whose gauge group does, in
general,NOT have a block diagonal symplectic embedding and involves additional
topological terms. The scalar potentials of the dimensionally reduced theories
naturally have some of the ingredients that were found necessary for stable de
Sitter ground states. We comment on the relation between the known 5D and 4D,
N=2 supergravities with stable de Sitter ground states.Comment: 42 pages;latex fil
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New dimensions in early flood warning across the globe using grand-ensemble weather predictions
Early and effective flood warning is essential to initiate timely measures to reduce loss of life and economic damage. The availability of several global ensemble weather prediction systems through the “THORPEX Interactive Grand Global Ensemble” (TIGGE) archive provides an opportunity to explore new dimensions in early flood forecasting and warning. TIGGE data has been used as meteorological input to the European Flood Alert System (EFAS) for a case study of a flood event in Romania in October 2007. Results illustrate that awareness for this case of flooding could have been raised as early as 8 days before the event and how the subsequent forecasts provide increasing insight into the range of possible flood conditions. This first assessment of one flood event illustrates the potential value of the TIGGE archive and the grand-ensembles approach to raise preparedness and thus to reduce the socio-economic impact of floods
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