8,473 research outputs found
Effective field theory approach to N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills at finite temperature
We study the perturbation expansion of the free energy of N=4 supersymmetric
SU(N) Yang-Mills at finite temperature in powers of 't Hooft's coupling g^2 N
in the large N limit. Infrared divergences are controlled by constructing a
hierarchy of two 3 dimensional effective field theories. This procedure is
applied to the calculation of the free energy to order (g^2 N)^(3/2), but it
can be extended to higher order corrections.Comment: LaTeX, 10 pages, 1 figure, uses eps
Complexified sigma model and duality
We show that the equations of motion associated with a complexified
sigma-model action do not admit manifest dual SO(n,n) symmetry. In the process
we discover new type of numbers which we called `complexoids' in order to
emphasize their close relation with both complex numbers and matroids. It turns
out that the complexoids allow to consider the analogue of the complexified
sigma-model action but with (1+1)-worldsheet metric, instead of
Euclidean-worldsheet metric. Our observations can be useful for further
developments of complexified quantum mechanics.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, improved versio
Heisenberg-invariant Kummer surfaces
We study the geometry of Nieto's quintic threefold (Barth & Nieto, J. Alg.
Geom. 3, 1994) and the Kummer and abelian surfaces that correspond to special
loci.Comment: Plain TeX, 17 pages. Final version, with minor corrections, to appear
in Proc. Edinburgh Math. So
Lessons Learned from the Pioneers 10/11 for a Mission to Test the Pioneer Anomaly
Analysis of the radio-metric tracking data from the Pioneer 10/11 spacecraft
at distances between 20--70 astronomical units (AU) from the Sun has
consistently indicated the presence of an anomalous, small, constant Doppler
frequency drift. The drift is a blue-shift, uniformly changing with rate a_t =
(2.92 +/- 0.44) x 10^(-18) s/s^2. It can also be interpreted as a constant
acceleration of a_P = (8.74 +/- 1.33) x 10^(-8) cm/s^2 directed towards the
Sun. Although it is suspected that there is a systematic origin to the effect,
none has been found. As a result, the nature of this anomaly has become of
growing interest. Here we discuss the details of our recent investigation
focusing on the effects both external to and internal to the spacecraft, as
well as those due to modeling and computational techniques. We review some of
the mechanisms proposed to explain the anomaly and show their inability to
account for the observed behavior of the anomaly. We also present lessons
learned from this investigation for a potential deep-space experiment that will
reveal the origin of the discovered anomaly and also will characterize its
properties with an accuracy of at least two orders of magnitude below the
anomaly's size. A number of critical requirements and design considerations for
such a mission are outlined and addressed.Comment: 11 pages, invited talk given at ``35th COSPAR Scientific Assebly,''
July 18-24, 2004, Paris, Franc
Directly Measured Limit on the Interplanetary Matter Density from Pioneer 10 and 11
The Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft had exceptional deep-space navigational
capabilities. The accuracies of their orbit reconstruction were limited,
however, by a small, anomalous, Doppler frequency drift that can be interpreted
as an acceleration of (8.74 +/- 1.33) x 10^{-8} cm/s^2 directed toward the Sun.
We investigate the possibility that this anomaly could be due to a drag on the
spacecraft from their passing through the interplanetary medium. Although this
mechanism is an appealing one, the existing Pioneer radiometric data would
require an unexpectedly high mass density of interplanetary dust for this
mechanism to work. Further, the magnitude of the density would have to be
nearly constant at distances ~ 20-70 AU. Therefore, it appears that such an
explanation is very unlikely, if not ruled out. Despite this, the measured
frequency drift by itself places a directly-measured, model-independent limit
of \lessim 3 x 10^{-19} g/cm^3 on the mass density of interplanetary dust in
the outer(~20-70 AU) solar system. Lower experimental limits can be placed if
one presumes a model that varies with distance. An example is the limit \lessim
6 x 10^{-20} g/cm^3 obtained for the model with an axially-symmetric density
distribution that falls off as the inverse of the distance. We emphasize that
the limits obtained are experimentally-measured, in situ limits. A mission to
investigate the anomaly would be able to place a better limit on the density,
or perhaps even to measure it.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, publication versio
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