995 research outputs found
Sewing Constraints and Non-Orientable Open Strings
We extend to non-orientable surfaces previous work on sewing constraints in
Conformal Field Theory. A new constraint, related to the real projective plane,
is described and is used to illustrate the correspondence with a previous
construction of open-string spectra.Comment: phyzzx, 11 pages and 4 figures, ROM2F-93/3
Flueric normal shock sensor
Design and testing of sensing elements and fluid logic circuit for shock location measurement of jet engine inlet diffuse
Gauge Coupling Constant Unification With Planck Scale Values Of Moduli
Convergence of the standard model gauge coupling constants to a common value
at around GeV is studied in the context of orbifold theories
where the modular symmetry groups for and moduli are broken to
subgroups of . The values of the moduli required for this
unification of coupling constants are studied for this case and also for the
case where string unification is accompanied by unification to a gauge group
larger then Comment: Tex, 15 pages, minor typos corrected and some references adde
Dust Devil Tracks
Dust devils that leave dark- or light-toned tracks are common on Mars and they can also be found on the Earthâs surface. Dust devil tracks (hereinafter DDTs) are ephemeral surface features with mostly sub-annual lifetimes. Regarding their size, DDT widths can range between âŒ1 m and âŒ1 km, depending on the diameter of dust devil that created the track, and DDT lengths range from a few tens of meters to several kilometers, limited by the duration and horizontal ground speed of dust devils. DDTs can be classified into three main types based on their morphology and albedo in contrast to their surroundings; all are found on both planets: (a) dark continuous DDTs, (b) dark cycloidal DDTs, and (c) bright DDTs. Dark continuous DDTs are the most common type on Mars. They are characterized by their relatively homogenous and continuous low albedo surface tracks. Based on terrestrial and martian in situ studies, these DDTs most likely form when surficial dust layers are removed to expose larger-grained substrate material (coarse sands of â„500 ÎŒm in diameter). The exposure of larger-grained materials changes the photometric properties of the surface; hence leading to lower albedo tracks because grain size is photometrically inversely proportional to the surface reflectance. However, although not observed so far, compositional differences (i.e., color differences) might also lead to albedo contrasts when dust is removed to expose substrate materials with mineralogical differences. For dark continuous DDTs, albedo drop measurements are around 2.5 % in the wavelength range of 550â850 nm on Mars and around 0.5 % in the wavelength range from 300â1100 nm on Earth. The removal of an equivalent layer thickness around 1 ÎŒm is sufficient for the formation of visible dark continuous DDTs on Mars and Earth. The next type of DDTs, dark cycloidal DDTs, are characterized by their low albedo pattern of overlapping scallops. Terrestrial in situ studies imply that they are formed when sand-sized material that is eroded from the outer vortex area of a dust devil is redeposited in annular patterns in the central vortex region. This type of DDT can also be found in on Mars in orbital image data, and although in situ studies are lacking, terrestrial analog studies, laboratory work, and numerical modeling suggest they have the same formation mechanism as those on Earth. Finally, bright DDTs are characterized by their continuous track pattern and high albedo compared to their undisturbed surroundings. They are found on both planets, but to date they have only been analyzed in situ on Earth. Here, the destruction of aggregates of dust, silt and sand by dust devils leads to smooth surfaces in contrast to the undisturbed rough surfaces surrounding the track. The resulting change in photometric properties occurs because the smoother surfaces have a higher reflectance compared to the surrounding rough surface, leading to bright DDTs. On Mars, the destruction of surficial dust-aggregates may also lead to bright DDTs. However, higher reflective surfaces may be produced by other formation mechanisms, such as dust compaction by passing dust devils, as this may also cause changes in photometric properties. On Mars, DDTs in general are found at all elevations and on a global scale, except on the permanent polar caps. DDT maximum areal densities occur during spring and summer in both hemispheres produced by an increase in dust devil activity caused by maximum insolation. Regionally, dust devil densities vary spatially likely controlled by changes in dust cover thicknesses and substrate materials. This variability makes it difficult to infer dust devil activity from DDT frequencies. Furthermore, only a fraction of dust devils leave tracks. However, DDTs can be used as proxies for dust devil lifetimes and wind directions and speeds, and they can also be used to predict lander or rover solar panel clearing events. Overall, the high DDT frequency in many areas on Mars leads to drastic albedo changes that affect large-scale weather patterns
Supersymmetric SO(10) Simplified
In the context of supersymmetric grand unified models, it is shown
that the gauge symmetry breaking as well as a natural doublet--triplet
splitting can be achieved with a minimal Higgs system consisting of a single
adjoint and a pair of vector and spinor multiplets. Such a Higgs spectrum has
been shown to arise in the free fermionic formulation of superstrings. Since
the symmetry breaking mechanism relies on non--renormalizable operators, some
of the Higgs particles of the model turn out to have masses somewhat below the
GUT scale. As a consequence, the unification scale is raised to about and sin is predicted to be slightly larger than the
minimal SUSY-- value. Including threshold uncertainties, which turn out
to be surprisingly small in the model, we show that sin prediction
is consistent with experiments.Comment: 23 pages, BA-94-4
On relevant boundary perturbations of unitary minimal models
We consider unitary Virasoro minimal models on the disk with Cardy boundary
conditions and discuss deformations by certain relevant boundary operators,
analogous to tachyon condensation in string theory. Concentrating on the least
relevant boundary field, we can perform a perturbative analysis of
renormalization group fixed points. We find that the systems always flow
towards stable fixed points which admit no further (non-trivial) relevant
perturbations. The new conformal boundary conditions are in general given by
superpositions of 'pure' Cardy boundary conditions.Comment: 13 pages; final version to appear in Nucl.Phys.
A Classification of 3-Family Grand Unification in String Theory I. The SO(10) and E_6 Models
We give a classification of 3-family SO(10) and E_6 grand unification in
string theory within the framework of conformal field theory and asymmetric
orbifolds. We argue that the construction of such models in the heterotic
string theory requires certain Z_6 asymmetric orbifolds that include a Z_3
outer-automorphism, the latter yielding a level-3 current algebra for the grand
unification gauge group SO(10) or E_6. We then classify all such Z_6 asymmetric
orbifolds that result in models with a non-abelian hidden sector. All models
classified in this paper have only one adjoint (but no other higher
representation) Higgs field in the grand unified gauge group. In addition, all
of them are completely anomaly free. There are two types of such 3-family
models. The first type consists of the unique SO(10) model with SU(2) X SU(2) X
SU(2) as its hidden sector (which is not asymptotically-free at the string
scale). This SO(10) model has 4 left-handed and 1 right-handed 16s. The second
type is described by a moduli space containing 17 models (distinguished by
their massless spectra). All these models have an SU(2) hidden sector, and 5
left-handed and 2 right-handed families in the grand unified gauge group. One
of these models is the unique E_6 model with an asymptotically-free SU(2)
hidden sector. The others are SO(10) models, 8 of them with an asymptotically
free hidden sector at the string scale.Comment: 35 pages, Revtex 3.0, one eps figure (to appear in Phys. Rev. D
Exact Results for a Kondo Problem in One Dimensional t-J Model
We propose an integrable Kondo problem in a one-dimensional (1D) model.
With the open boundary condition of the wave functions at the impurity sites,
the model can be exactly solved via Bethe ansatz for a class of
(Kondo coupling constants) and (impurity potentials) parametrized by
a single parameter . The integrable value of runs from negative
infinity to positive infinity, which allows us to study both the ferromagnetic
Kondo problem and antiferromagnetic Kondo problem in a strongly correlated
electron system. Generally, there is a residual entropy for the ground state,
which indicates a typical non-Fermi liquid behavior.Comment: 5 pages Revtex, no figure
Combinatorics of Boundaries in String Theory
We investigate the possibility that stringy nonperturbative effects appear as
holes in the world-sheet. We focus on the case of Dirichlet string theory,
which we argue should be formulated differently than in previous work, and we
find that the effects of boundaries are naturally weighted by .Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, LaTe
Vanishing corrections on the intermediate scale and implications for unification of forces
In two-step breaking of a class of grand unified theories including SO(10),we
prove a theorem showing that the scale where the Pati-Salam gauge
symmetry with parity breaks down to the standard gauge group,has vanishing
corrections due to all sources emerging from higher scales such as
the one-loop and all higher loop effects,the GUT-threshold,gravitational
smearing,and string threshold effects. Implications of such a scale for the
unification of gauge couplings with small Majorana neutrino masses are
discussed.In string inspired SO(10) we show that ,needed for neutrino masses,with the GUT scale can
be realized provided certain particle states in the predicted spectum are
light.Comment: 21 pages, Late
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