7,160 research outputs found

    Enhanced Instability of de Sitter Space in Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet Gravity

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    We show that the addition of a topological Gauss-Bonnet term to the gravitational action can greatly increase the instability of four-dimensional de Sitter space, by favoring the nucleation of black holes. The pair-production rate given by the Euclidean action for the instanton takes the form exp(Delta S) where S is the entropy in Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet theory. The coefficient of the Gauss-Bonnet term in the action sets a stability bound on the curvature of empty de Sitter space. For that coefficient in the low-energy effective action of heterotic string theory, the maximal curvature of de Sitter space is in general much lower than the Planck scale.Comment: 8 page

    Swift observations of the dwarf nova ASASSN-18fs

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    The All Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN) reported a possible Galactic dwarf nova ASASSN-18fs on 2018 March 19 at ∼\sim13.2 mag in the V band, with a quiescent magnitude of V>>17.6. Here we report on the follow-up photometry using the {\it Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory}.Comment: Published by AAS Research Note

    Variable quiescent state for the neutron-star X-ray transient SAX J1750.8-2900: not such a hot neutron star after all?

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    We monitored the neutron star low-mass X-ray binary SAX J1750.8-2900 after the end of its 2015/2016 outburst using the X-ray Telescope (XRT) aboard Swift to detect possible post-outburst 'rebrightenings', similar to those seen after its 2008 outburst. We did not detect any rebrightening behaviour, suggesting that the physical mechanism behind the rebrightening events is not always active after each outburst of the source. Any model attempting to explain these rebrightenings should thus be able to reproduce the different outburst profiles of the source at different times. Surprisingly, our Swift/XRT observations were unable to detect the source, contrary to previous Swift/XRT observations in quiescence. We determined a temperature upper limit of ≤\leq 106 eV, much colder than the post 2008 outburst value of ∼\sim 145 eV. We also report on an archival Chandra observation of the source after its 2011 outburst and found a temperature of ∼\sim 126 eV. These different temperatures, including the non-detection very close after the end of the 2015/2016 outburst, are difficult to explain in any model assuming we observe the cooling emission from a neutron star core or an accretion-heated crust. We discuss our observations in the context of a change in envelope (the outer ∼\sim 100 m of the crust) composition and (possibly in combination with) a cooling crust. Both hypotheses cannot explain our results unless potentially unrealistic assumptions are made. Irrespective of what causes the temperature variability, it is clear that the neutron star in SAX J1750.8-2900 may not be as hot as previously assumed.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Perturbations of vortex ring pairs

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    We study pairs of co-axial vortex rings starting from the action for a classical bosonic string in a three-form background. We complete earlier work on the phase diagram of classical orbits by explicitly considering the case where the circulations of the two vortex rings are equal and opposite. We then go on to study perturbations, focusing on cases where the relevant four-dimensional transfer matrix splits into two-dimensional blocks. When the circulations of the rings have the same sign, instabilities are mostly limited to wavelengths smaller than a dynamically generated length scale at which single-ring instabilities occur. When the circulations have the opposite sign, larger wavelength instabilities can occur.Comment: 62 pages, 21 figure

    Segmented strings and the McMillan map

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    We present new exact solutions describing motions of closed segmented strings in AdS3AdS_3 in terms of elliptic functions. The existence of analytic expressions is due to the integrability of the classical equations of motion, which in our examples reduce to instances of the McMillan map. We also obtain a discrete evolution rule for the motion in AdS3AdS_3 of arbitrary bound states of fundamental strings and D1-branes in the test approximation.Comment: 18 page

    Massage Therapy in Outpatient Cancer Care: A Metropolitan Area Analysis.

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    Massage offers cancer patients general quality of life benefits as well as alleviation of cancer-related symptoms/cancer-treatment-related symptoms including pain, anxiety, and fatigue. Little is known about whether massage is accessible to cancer patients who receive treatment in the outpatient setting and how massage is incorporated into the overall cancer treatment plan. Outpatient cancer centers (n = 78) in a single metropolitan area were included this mixed-methods project that included a systematic analysis of website information and a telephone survey. Massage was offered at only 40 centers (51.3% of total). A range of massage modalities were represented, with energy-based therapies (Reiki and Therapeutic Touch) most frequently provided. Although massage therapists are licensed health care providers in the states included in this analysis, massage was also provided by nurses, physical therapists, and other health care professionals

    O(N) and O(N) and O(N)

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    Three related analyses of ϕ4\phi^4 theory with O(N)O(N) symmetry are presented. In the first, we review the O(N)O(N) model over the pp-adic numbers and the discrete renormalization group transformations which can be understood as spin blocking in an ultrametric context. We demonstrate the existence of a Wilson-Fisher fixed point using an ϵ\epsilon expansion, and we show how to obtain leading order results for the anomalous dimensions of low dimension operators near the fixed point. Along the way, we note an important aspect of ultrametric field theories, which is a non-renormalization theorem for kinetic terms. In the second analysis, we employ large NN methods to establish formulas for anomalous dimensions which are valid equally for field theories over the pp-adic numbers and field theories on Rn\mathbb{R}^n. Results for anomalous dimensions agree between the first and second analyses when they can be meaningfully compared. In the third analysis, we consider higher derivative versions of the O(N)O(N) model on Rn\mathbb{R}^n, the simplest of which has been studied in connection with spatially modulated phases. Our general formula for anomalous dimensions can still be applied. Analogies with two-derivative theories hint at the existence of some interesting unconventional field theories in four real Euclidean dimensions.Comment: 44 pages, 8 figure

    Further constraints on neutron star crustal properties in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9−-342058

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    We report on two new quiescent {\it XMM-Newton} observations (in addition to the earlier {\it Swift}/XRT and {\it XMM-Newton} coverage) of the cooling neutron star crust in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9−-342058. Its crust was heated during the ∼\sim4.5 month accretion outburst of the source. From our quiescent observations, fitting the spectra with a neutron star atmosphere model, we found that the crust had cooled from ∼\sim 100 eV to ∼\sim73 eV from ∼\sim8 days to ∼\sim479 days after the end of its outburst. However, during the most recent observation, taken ∼\sim860 days after the end of the outburst, we found that the crust appeared not to have cooled further. This suggested that the crust had returned to thermal equilibrium with the neutron star core. We model the quiescent thermal evolution with the theoretical crustal cooling code NSCool and find that the source requires a shallow heat source, in addition to the standard deep crustal heating processes, contributing ∼\sim0.9 MeV per accreted nucleon during outburst to explain its observed temperature decay. Our high quality {\it XMM-Newton} data required an additional hard component to adequately fit the spectra. This slightly complicates our interpretation of the quiescent data of 1RXS J180408.9−-342058. The origin of this component is not fully understood.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
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