8,795 research outputs found
Field Theory Entropy, the -theorem and the Renormalization Group
We consider entropy and relative entropy in Field theory and establish
relevant monotonicity properties with respect to the couplings. The relative
entropy in a field theory with a hierarchy of renormalization group fixed
points ranks the fixed points, the lowest relative entropy being assigned to
the highest multicritical point. We argue that as a consequence of a
generalized theorem Wilsonian RG flows induce an increase in entropy and
propose the relative entropy as the natural quantity which increases from one
fixed point to another in more than two dimensions.Comment: 25 pages, plain TeX (macros included), 6 ps figures. Addition in
title. Entropy of cutoff Gaussian model modified in section 4 to avoid a
divergence. Therefore, last figure modified. Other minor changes to improve
readability. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
The Influence of Thermal Pressure on Equilibrium Models of Hypermassive Neutron Star Merger Remnants
The merger of two neutron stars leaves behind a rapidly spinning hypermassive
object whose survival is believed to depend on the maximum mass supported by
the nuclear equation of state, angular momentum redistribution by
(magneto-)rotational instabilities, and spindown by gravitational waves. The
high temperatures (~5-40 MeV) prevailing in the merger remnant may provide
thermal pressure support that could increase its maximum mass and, thus, its
life on a neutrino-cooling timescale. We investigate the role of thermal
pressure support in hypermassive merger remnants by computing sequences of
spherically-symmetric and axisymmetric uniformly and differentially rotating
equilibrium solutions to the general-relativistic stellar structure equations.
Using a set of finite-temperature nuclear equations of state, we find that hot
maximum-mass critically spinning configurations generally do not support larger
baryonic masses than their cold counterparts. However, subcritically spinning
configurations with mean density of less than a few times nuclear saturation
density yield a significantly thermally enhanced mass. Even without decreasing
the maximum mass, cooling and other forms of energy loss can drive the remnant
to an unstable state. We infer secular instability by identifying approximate
energy turning points in equilibrium sequences of constant baryonic mass
parametrized by maximum density. Energy loss carries the remnant along the
direction of decreasing gravitational mass and higher density until instability
triggers collapse. Since configurations with more thermal pressure support are
less compact and thus begin their evolution at a lower maximum density, they
remain stable for longer periods after merger.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Explanation and Elaboration Document for the STROBE-Vet Statement: Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology—Veterinary Extension
The STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) statement was first published in 2007 and again in 2014. The purpose of the original STROBE was to provide guidance for authors, reviewers and editors to improve the comprehensiveness of reporting; however, STROBE has a unique focus on observational studies. Although much of the guidance provided by the original STROBE document is directly applicable, it was deemed useful to map those statements to veterinary concepts, provide veterinary examples and highlight unique aspects of reporting in veterinary observational studies. Here, we present the examples and explanations for the checklist items included in the STROBE-Vet Statement. Thus, this is a companion document to the STROBE-Vet Statement Methods and process document, which describes the checklist and how it was developed
Effective Lagrangian for self-interacting scalar field theories in curved spacetime
We consider a self-interacting scalar field theory in a slowly varying
gravitational background field. Using zeta-function regularization and
heat-kernel techniques, we derive the one-loop effective Lagrangian up to
second order in the variation of the background field and up to quadratic terms
in the curvature tensors. Specializing to different spacetimes of physical
interest, the influence of the curvature on the phase transition is considered.Comment: 14 pages, LaTex, UTF 29
Study protocol: Reporting characteristics of intervention trials of animals published in the Journal of Dairy Science in 2017
Objectives The scope of this cross-sectional observational study is to evaluate prevalence of reporting the 19 objective items of the REFLECT statement checklist (Sargeant et al., 2010), with the primary outcome being prevalence of sample size calculation, in clinical trials published in the Journal of Dairy Science from January to December of 2017. We will also determine risk of bias in individual studies using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 tools for individually randomized, parallel group trials; cluster randomized, parallel group trials; and individually randomized, cross-over trials (Higgins et al., 2016)
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