1,155 research outputs found
Diagnosing numerical Cherenkov instabilities in relativistic plasma simulations based on general meshes
Numerical Cherenkov radiation (NCR) or instability is a detrimental effect
frequently found in electromagnetic particle-in-cell (EM-PIC) simulations
involving relativistic plasma beams. NCR is caused by spurious coupling between
electromagnetic-field modes and multiple beam resonances. This coupling may
result from the slow down of poorly-resolved waves due to numerical (grid)
dispersion and from aliasing mechanisms. NCR has been studied in the past for
finite-difference-based EM-PIC algorithms on regular (structured) meshes with
rectangular elements. In this work, we extend the analysis of NCR to
finite-element-based EM-PIC algorithms implemented on unstructured meshes. The
influence of different mesh element shapes and mesh layouts on NCR is studied.
Analytic predictions are compared against results from finite-element-based
EM-PIC simulations of relativistic plasma beams on various mesh types.Comment: 31 pages, 20 figure
Spinning Loop Black Holes
In this paper we construct four Kerr-like spacetimes starting from the loop
black hole Schwarzschild solutions (LBH) and applying the Newman-Janis
transformation. In previous papers the Schwarzschild LBH was obtained replacing
the Ashtekar connection with holonomies on a particular graph in a
minisuperspace approximation which describes the black hole interior. Starting
from this solution, we use a Newman-Janis transformation and we specialize to
two different and natural complexifications inspired from the complexifications
of the Schwarzschild and Reissner-Nordstrom metrics. We show explicitly that
the space-times obtained in this way are singularity free and thus there are no
naked singularities. We show that the transformation move, if any, the
causality violating regions of the Kerr metric far from r=0. We study the
space-time structure with particular attention to the horizons shape. We
conclude the paper with a discussion on a regular Reissner-Nordstrom black hole
derived from the Schwarzschild LBH and then applying again the Newmann-Janis
transformation.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figure
Tunneling of massive and charged particles from noncommutative Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole
Massive charged and uncharged particles tunneling from commutative
Reissner-Nordstrom black hole horizon has been studied with details in
literature. Here, by adopting the coherent state picture of spacetime
noncommutativity, we study tunneling of massive and charged particles from a
noncommutative inspired Reissner-Nordstrom black hole horizon. We show that
Hawking radiation in this case is not purely thermal and there are correlations
between emitted modes. These correlations may provide a solution to the
information loss problem. We also study thermodynamics of noncommutative
horizon in this setup.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Intensive post-operative follow-up of breast cancer patients with tumour markers: CEA, TPA or CA15.3 vs MCA and MCA-CA15.3 vs CEA-TPA-CA15.3 panel in the early detection of distant metastases
BACKGROUND: In breast cancer current guidelines do not recommend the routine use of serum tumour markers. Differently, we observed that CEA-TPA-CA15.3 (carcinoembryonic (CEA) tissue polypeptide (TPA) and cancer associated 115D8/DF3 (CA15.3) antigens) panel permits early detection and treatment for most relapsing patients. As high sensitivity and specificity and different cut-off values have been reported for mucin-like carcinoma associated antigen (MCA), we compared MCA with the above mentioned tumour markers and MCA-CA15.3 with the CEA-TPA-CA15.3 panel. METHODS: In 289 breast cancer patients submitted to an intensive post-operative follow-up with tumour markers, we compared MCA (cut-off values, ≥ 11 and ≥ 15 U/mL) with CEA or CA15.3 or TPA for detection of relapse. In addition, we compared the MCA-CA15.3 and CEA-TPA-CA15.3 tumour marker panels. RESULTS: Distant metastases occurred 19 times in 18 (6.7%) of the 268 patients who were disease-free at the beginning of the study. MCA sensitivity with both cut-off values was higher than that of CEA or TPA or CA15.3 (68% vs 10%, 26%, 32% and 53% vs 16%, 42%, 32% respectively). With cut-off ≥ 11 U/mL, MCA showed the lowest specificity (42%); with cut-off ≥ 15 U/mL, MCA specificity was similar to TPA (73% vs 72%) and lower than that of CEA and CA15.3 (96% and 97% respectively). With ≥ 15 U/mL MCA cut-off, MCA sensitivity increased from 53% to 58% after its association with CA15.3. Sensitivity of CEA-TPA-CA15.3 panel was 74% (14 of 19 recurrences). Eight of the 14 recurrences early detected with CEA-TPA-CA15.3 presented as a single lesion (oligometastatic disease) (5) or were confined to bony skeleton (3) (26% and 16% respectively of the 19 relapses). With ≥ 11 U/mL MCA cut-off, MCA-CA15.3 association showed higher sensitivity but lower specificity, accuracy and positive predictive value than the CEA-TPA-CA15.3 panel. CONCLUSION: At both the evaluated cut-off values serum MCA sensitivity is higher than that of CEA, TPA or CA15.3 but its specificity is similar to or lower than that of TPA. Overall, CEA-TPA-CA15.3 panel is more accurate than MCA-CA15.3 association and can "early" detect a few relapsed patients with limited metastatic disease and more favourable prognosis. These findings further support the need for prospective randomised clinical trial to assess whether an intensive post-operative follow-up with an appropriate use of serum tumour markers can significantly improve clinical outcome of early detected relapsing patients
Hawking emission from quantum gravity black holes
We address the issue of modelling quantum gravity effects in the evaporation
of higher dimensional black holes in order to go beyond the usual
semi-classical approximation. After reviewing the existing six families of
quantum gravity corrected black hole geometries, we focus our work on
non-commutative geometry inspired black holes, which encode model independent
characteristics, are unaffected by the quantum back reaction and have an
analytical form compact enough for numerical simulations. We consider the
higher dimensional, spherically symmetric case and we proceed with a complete
analysis of the brane/bulk emission for scalar fields. The key feature which
makes the evaporation of non-commutative black holes so peculiar is the
possibility of having a maximum temperature. Contrary to what happens with
classical Schwarzschild black holes, the emission is dominated by low frequency
field modes on the brane. This is a distinctive and potentially testable
signature which might disclose further features about the nature of quantum
gravity.Comment: 36 pages, 18 figures, v2: updated reference list, minor corrections,
version matching that published on JHE
Entropy of the Randall-Sundrum black brane world to all orders in the Planck length
We study the effects, to all orders in the Planck length from a generalized
uncertainty principle (GUP), on the statistical entropy of massive scalar bulk
fields in the Randall-Sundrum black brane world. We show that the
Bekenstein-Hawking area law is not preserved, and contains small corrections
terms proportional to the black hole inverse area.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure. (v2): section 4 improve
Galactic rotation curves inspired by a noncommutative-geometry background
This paper discusses the observed at rotation curves of galaxies in the
context of noncommutative geometry. The energy density of such a geometry is
diffused throughout a region due to the uncertainty encoded in the coordinate
commutator. This intrinsic property appears to be sufficient for producing
stable circular orbits, as well as attractive gravity, without the need for
dark matter.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Published in Gen.Rel.Grav. 44 (2012) 905-91
Thermodynamics and evaporation of the noncommutative black hole
We investigate the thermodynamics of the noncommutative black hole whose
static picture is similar to that of the nonsingular black hole known as the de
Sitter-Schwarzschild black hole. It turns out that the final remnant of
extremal black hole is a thermodynamically stable object. We describe the
evaporation process of this black hole by using the noncommutativity-corrected
Vaidya metric. It is found that there exists a close relationship between
thermodynamic approach and evaporation process.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, added references, to appear in JHE
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