492 research outputs found
Oesophageal bleeding from aortooesophageal fistula due to aortic aneurysm Case reports and a review of the literature
From pathology data it appears that aortic aneurysm may be the commonest cause of aorto-oesophageal fistula (AOF), but this entity is rarely diagnosed clinically. We report 6 patients, seen during a 5-year period, with aneurysms which initially caused chest pain and minor oesophageal bleeding. The diagnosis of AOF was made before death in only 1 case; surgery was not attempted. This patient and 4 others died when rupture into the oesophageal lumen or wall caused exsanguinating haemorrhage. The 6th patient, who died after prostatectomy without a major haemorrhage. had oesophageal fibrosis localized at the aneurysm; this type of lesion occurs in the development of a fistula. The therapeutic ideal is to forestall fatal rupture by prompt diagnosis and immediate surgery when mild oesophageal bleeding gives warning of fistula formation
Covariant Field Equations, Gauge Fields and Conservation Laws from Yang-Mills Matrix Models
The effective geometry and the gravitational coupling of nonabelian gauge and
scalar fields on generic NC branes in Yang-Mills matrix models is determined.
Covariant field equations are derived from the basic matrix equations of
motions, known as Yang-Mills algebra. Remarkably, the equations of motion for
the Poisson structure and for the nonabelian gauge fields follow from a matrix
Noether theorem, and are therefore protected from quantum corrections. This
provides a transparent derivation and generalization of the effective action
governing the SU(n) gauge fields obtained in [1], including the would-be
topological term. In particular, the IKKT matrix model is capable of describing
4-dimensional NC space-times with a general effective metric. Metric
deformations of flat Moyal-Weyl space are briefly discussed.Comment: 31 pages. V2: minor corrections, references adde
Collective Dynamics of One-Dimensional Charge Density Waves
The effect of disorder on the static and dynamic behaviour of one-dimensional
charge density waves at low temperatures is studied by analytical and numerical
approaches. In the low temperature region the spatial behaviour of the
phase-phase correlation function is dominated by disorder but the roughness
exponent remains the same as in the pure case. Contrary to high dimensional
systems the dependence of the creep velocity on the electric field is described
by an analytic function.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Black diholes in five dimensions
Using a generalized Weyl formalism, we show how stationary, axisymmetric
solutions of the four-dimensional vacuum Einstein equation can be turned into
static, axisymmetric solutions of five-dimensional dilaton gravity coupled to a
two-form gauge field. This procedure is then used to obtain new solutions of
the latter theory describing pairs of extremal magnetic black holes with
opposite charges, known as black diholes. These diholes are kept in static
equilibrium by membrane-like conical singularities stretching along two
different directions. We also present solutions describing diholes suspended in
a background magnetic field, and with unbalanced charges.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures; reference adde
Caged Black Holes: Black Holes in Compactified Spacetimes I -- Theory
In backgrounds with compact dimensions there may exist several phases of
black objects including the black-hole and the black-string. The phase
transition between them raises puzzles and touches fundamental issues such as
topology change, uniqueness and Cosmic Censorship. No analytic solution is
known for the black hole, and moreover, one can expect approximate solutions
only for very small black holes, while the phase transition physics happens
when the black hole is large. Hence we turn to numerical solutions. Here some
theoretical background to the numerical analysis is given, while the results
will appear in a forthcoming paper. Goals for a numerical analysis are set. The
scalar charge and tension along the compact dimension are defined and used as
improved order parameters which put both the black hole and the black string at
finite values on the phase diagram. Predictions for small black holes are
presented. The differential and the integrated forms of the first law are
derived, and the latter (Smarr's formula) can be used to estimate the ``overall
numerical error''. Field asymptotics and expressions for physical quantities in
terms of the numerical ones are supplied. Techniques include ``method of
equivalent charges'', free energy, dimensional reduction, and analytic
perturbation for small black holes.Comment: 23 pages. v3: version to be published in PRD, 3 references adde
Black Rings, Supertubes, and a Stringy Resolution of Black Hole Non-Uniqueness
In order to address the issues raised by the recent discovery of
non-uniqueness of black holes in five dimensions, we construct a solution of
string theory at low energies describing a five-dimensional spinning black ring
with three charges that can be interpreted as D1-brane, D5-brane, and momentum
charges. The solution possesses closed timelike curves (CTCs) and other
pathologies, whose origin we clarify. These pathologies can be avoided by
setting any one of the charges, e.g. the momentum, to zero. We argue that the
D1-D5-charged black ring, lifted to six dimensions, describes the thermal
excitation of a supersymmetric D1-D5 supertube, which is in the same U-duality
class as the D0-F1 supertube. We explain how the stringy microscopic
description of the D1-D5 system distinguishes between a spherical black hole
and a black ring with the same asymptotic charges, and therefore provides a
(partial) resolution of the non-uniqueness of black holes in five dimensions.Comment: 33 pages, 1 figur
Rotating Circular Strings, and Infinite Non-Uniqueness of Black Rings
We present new self-gravitating solutions in five dimensions that describe
circular strings, i.e., rings, electrically coupled to a two-form potential (as
e.g., fundamental strings do), or to a dual magnetic one-form. The rings are
prevented from collapsing by rotation, and they create a field analogous to a
dipole, with no net charge measured at infinity. They can have a regular
horizon, and we show that this implies the existence of an infinite number of
black rings, labeled by a continuous parameter, with the same mass and angular
momentum as neutral black rings and black holes. We also discuss the solution
for a rotating loop of fundamental string. We show how more general rings arise
from intersections of branes with a regular horizon (even at extremality),
closely related to the configurations that yield the four-dimensional black
hole with four charges. We reproduce the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of a large
extremal ring through a microscopic calculation. Finally, we discuss some
qualitative ideas for a microscopic understanding of neutral and dipole black
rings.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures. v2: minor changes, added reference. v3:
erroneous values of T_{ww} (eq.(3.39)) and n_p (eq.(5.20)) corrected, and
accompanying discussion amended. In the journal version these corrections
appear as an appended erratum. No major changes involve
A boundary value problem for the five-dimensional stationary rotating black holes
We study the boundary value problem for the stationary rotating black hole
solutions to the five-dimensional vacuum Einstein equation. Assuming the two
commuting rotational symmetry and the sphericity of the horizon topology, we
show that the black hole is uniquely characterized by the mass, and a pair of
the angular momenta.Comment: 16 pages, no figure
A Charged Rotating Black Ring
We construct a supergravity solution describing a charged rotating black ring
with S^2xS^1 horizon in a five dimensional asymptotically flat spacetime. In
the neutral limit the solution is the rotating black ring recently found by
Emparan and Reall. We determine the exact value of the lower bound on J^2/M^3,
where J is the angular momentum and M the mass; the black ring saturating this
bound has maximum entropy for the given mass. The charged black ring is
characterized by mass M, angular momentum J, and electric charge Q, and it also
carries local fundamental string charge. The electric charge distributed
uniformly along the ring helps support the ring against its gravitational
self-attraction, so that J^2/M^3 can be made arbitrarily small while Q/M
remains finite. The charged black ring has an extremal limit in which the
horizon coincides with the singularity.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur
Supersymmetric AdS5 black holes
The first examples of supersymmetric, asymptotically AdS5, black hole
solutions are presented. They form a 1-parameter family of solutions of minimal
five-dimensional gauged supergravity. Their angular momentum can never vanish.
The solutions are obtained by a systematic analysis of supersymmetric solutions
with Killing horizons. Other new examples of such solutions are obtained. These
include solutions for which the horizon is a homogeneous Nil or SL(2,R)
manifold.Comment: 31 pages. v2: References and calculation of holographic stress tensor
added. v3: Solutions preserve 2 supersymmetries. Our original claim that they
preserve 4 supersymmetries was based on Ref. [30], which contains a mistake
(the general timelike solution preserves 2, not 4, supersymmetries). Nothing
else affecte
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