4,379 research outputs found

    Dual descriptions of massive spin-3 particles in D=2+1D=2+1 via Noether gauge embedment

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    We present here a relationship among massive self-dual models for spin-3 particles in D=2+1D=2+1 via the Noether Gauge Embedment (NGE)(NGE) procedure. Starting with a first order model (in derivatives) SSD(1)S_{SD(1)} we have obtained a sequence of four self-dual models SSD(i)S_{SD(i)} where i=1,2,3,4i=1,2,3,4. We demonstrate that the NGENGE procedure generate the correct action for the auxiliary fields automatically. We obtain the whole action for the 4th4th order self-dual model including all the needed auxiliary fields to get rid of the ghosts of the theory.Comment: 16 pages, 1 tabl

    Master actions for massive spin-3 particles in D=2+1

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    We present here a relationship among massive self-dual models for spin-3 particles in D=2+1D=2+1 via the master action procedure. Starting with a first order model (in derivatives) SSD(1)S_{SD(1)} we have constructed a master action which interpolates among a sequence of four self-dual models SSD(i)S_{SD(i)} where i=1,2,3,4i=1,2,3,4. By analyzing the particle content of mixing terms, we give additional arguments that explain why it is apparently impossible to jump from the fourth order model to a higher order model. We have also analyzed similarities and differences between the fourth order KK-term in the spin-2 case and the analogous fourth order term in the spin-3 context.Comment: 16 page

    Exploring the Venus global super-rotation using a comprehensive General Circulation Model

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    The atmospheric circulation in Venus is well known to exhibit strong super-rotation. However, the atmospheric mechanisms responsible for the formation of this super-rotation are still not fully understood. In this work, we developed a new Venus general circulation model to study the most likely mechanisms driving the atmosphere to the current observed circulation. Our model includes a new radiative transfer, convection and suitably adapted boundary layer schemes and a dynamical core that takes into account the dependence of the heat capacity at constant pressure with temperature. The new Venus model is able to simulate a super-rotation phenomenon in the cloud region quantitatively similar to the one observed. The mechanisms maintaining the strong winds in the cloud region were found in the model results to be a combination of zonal mean circulation, thermal tides and transient waves. In this process, the semi-diurnal tide excited in the upper clouds has a key contribution in transporting axial angular momentum mainly from the upper atmosphere towards the cloud region. The magnitude of the super-rotation in the cloud region is sensitive to various radiative parameters such as the amount of solar radiative energy absorbed by the surface, which controls the static stability near the surface. In this work, we also discuss the main difficulties in representing the flow below the cloud base in Venus atmospheric models. Our new radiative scheme is more suitable for 3D Venus climate models than those used in previous work due to its easy adaptability to different atmospheric conditions. This flexibility of the model was crucial to explore the uncertainties in the lower atmospheric conditions and may also be used in the future to explore, for example, dynamical-radiative-microphysical feedbacks.Comment: Accepted for publication in Planet. Space Sc

    Massive "spin-2" theories in arbitrary D≥3D \ge 3 dimensions

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    Here we show that in arbitrary dimensions D≥3D\ge 3 there are two families of second order Lagrangians describing massive "spin-2" particles via a nonsymmetric rank-2 tensor. They differ from the usual Fierz-Pauli theory in general. At zero mass one of the families is Weyl invariant. Such massless theory has no particle content in D=3D=3 and gives rise, via master action, to a dual higher order (in derivatives) description of massive spin-2 particles in D=3D=3 where both the second and the fourth order terms are Weyl invariant, contrary to the linearized New Massive Gravity. However, only the fourth order term is invariant under arbitrary antisymmetric shifts. Consequently, the antisymmetric part of the tensor e[μν]e_{[\mu\nu]} propagates at large momentum as 1/p21/p^2 instead of 1/p41/p^4. So, the same kind of obstacle for the renormalizability of the New Massive Gravity reappears in this nonsymmetric higher order description of massive spin-2 particles.Comment: 11 pages, 0 figure

    Massive spin-2 particles via embedment of the Fierz-Pauli equations of motion

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    Here we obtain alternative descriptions of massive spin-2 particles by an embedding procedure of the Fierz-Pauli equations of motion. All models are free of ghosts at quadratic level although most of them are of higher order in derivatives. The models that we obtain can be nonlinearly completed in terms of a dynamic and a fixed metric. They include some f(R)f(R) massive gravities recently considered in the literature. In some cases there is an infrared (no derivative) modification of the Fierz-Pauli mass term altogether with higher order terms in derivatives. The analytic structure of the propagator of the corresponding free theories is not affected by the extra terms in the action as compared to the usual second order Fierz-Pauli theory.Comment: 13 page

    Modulational instability of spatially broadband nonlinear optical pulses in four-state atomic systems

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    The modulational instability of broadband optical pulses in a four-state atomic system is investigated. In particular, starting from a recently derived generalized nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation, a wave-kinetic equation is derived. A comparison between coherent and random phase wave states is made. It is found that the spatial spectral broadening can contribute to the nonlinear stability of ultra-short optical pulses. In practical terms, this could be achieved by using random phase plate techniques.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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