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Energy in an Expanding Universe in the Teleparallel Geometry
The main purpose of this paper is to explicitly verify the consistency of the
energy-momentum and angular momentum tensor of the gravitational field
established in the Hamiltonian structure of the Teleparallel Equivalent of
General Relativity (TEGR). In order to reach these objectives, we obtained the
total energy and angular momentum (matter plus gravitational field) of the
closed universe of the Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW). The result
is compared with those obtained from the pseudotensors of Einstein and
Landau-Lifshitz. We also applied the field equations (TEGR) in an expanding
FLRW universe. Considering the stress energy-momentum tensor for a perfect
fluid, we found a teleparallel equivalent of Friedmann equations of General
Relativity (GR).Comment: 19 pages, no figures. Revised in view of Referee's comments. Version
to appear in the Brazilian Journal of Physic
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Rhegmatogenous retinal detachment masquerading as exudative panuveitis with intense anterior chamber inflammatory reaction.
Purpose:This is a retrospective case report illustrating the diagnostic and therapeutic challenges associated with a chronic rhegmatogenous retinal detachment masquerading as a severe panuveitis with intense anterior chamber inflammation. We have included clinical features, anterior segment and fundus photography, B-scan ultrasonography, fluorescein angiography, and intraoperative findings. Observations:A 26-year-old male presented with features of unilateral panuveitis: hypotony, anterior segment inflammation (posterior synechiae and anterior chamber cell with fibrin clumping), diffuse choroidal thickening, and retinal detachment. Laboratory investigations for infectious or rheumatologic processes were negative, and empiric systemic corticosteroid therapy was unsuccessful. This prompted suspicion for an alternate primary etiology, and pars plana vitrectomy revealed small retinal breaks as the underlying cause of the retinal detachment and inflammation. Conclusions:Rhegmatogenous retinal detachments are a known cause of intraocular inflammation. Nevertheless, it remains a challenge to recognize retinal breaks in this setting, particularly with robust anterior segment inflammation and posterior findings resembling severe exudative uveitis. Being aware of this unique presentation may prevent delays in diagnosis and have important prognostic implications
Thulium and ytterbium-doped titanium oxide thin films deposited by ultrasonic spray pyrolysis
Thin films of thulium and ytterbium-doped titanium oxide were grown by
metal-organic spray pyrolysis deposition from titanium(IV)oxide
bis(acetylacetonate), thulium(III) tris(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionate)
and ytterbium(III) tris(acetylacetonate). Deposition temperatures have been
investigated from 300{\deg}C to 600{\deg}C. Films have been studied regarding
their crystallity and doping quality. Structural and composition
characterisations of TiO2:Tm,Yb were performed by electron microprobe, X-ray
diffraction and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The deposition rate
can reach 0.8 \mum/h. The anatase phase of TiO2 was obtained after synthesis at
400{\deg}C or higher. Organic contamination at low deposition temperature is
eliminated by annealing treatments.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Outflows of hot molecular gas in ultra-luminous infra-red galaxies mapped with VLT-SINFONI
We present the detection and morphological characterization of hot molecular
gas outflows in nearby ultra-luminous infrared galaxies, using the near-IR
integral-field spectrograph SINFONI on the VLT. We detect outflows observed in
the 2.12 micron H 1-0 S(1) line for three out of four ULIRGs analyzed;
IRAS 12112+0305, 14348-1447, and 22491-1808. The outflows are mapped on scales
of 0.7-1.6 kpc, show typical outflow velocities of 300-500 km/s, and appear to
originate from the nuclear region. The outflows comprise hot molecular gas
masses of ~6-8x10 M(sun). Assuming a hot-to-cold molecular gas mass ratio
of 6x10, as found in nearby luminous IR galaxies, the total (hot+cold)
molecular gas mass in these outflows is expected to be ~1x10 M(sun). This
translates into molecular mass outflow rates of ~30-85 M(sun)/yr, which is a
factor of a few lower than the star formation rate in these ULIRGs. In
addition, most of the outflowing molecular gas does not reach the escape
velocity of these merger systems, which implies that the bulk of the outflowing
molecular gas is re-distributed within the system and thus remains available
for future star formation. The fastest H outflow is seen in the
Compton-thick AGN of IRAS 14348-1447, reaching a maximum outflow velocity of
~900 km/s. Another ULIRG, IRAS 17208-0014, shows asymmetric H line
profiles different from the outflows seen in the other three ULIRGs. We discuss
several alternative explanations for its line asymmetries, including a very
gentle galactic wind, internal gas dynamics, low-velocity gas outside the disk,
or two superposed gas disks. We do not detect the hot molecular counterpart to
the outflow previously detected in CO(2-1) in IRAS 17208-0014, but we note that
our SINFONI data are not sensitive enough to detect this outflow if it has a
small hot-to-cold molecular gas mass ratio of < 9x10.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (11 pages, 10 figures
The universal character of Zwanziger's horizon function in Euclidean Yang-Mills theories
In light of the recently established BRST invariant formulation of the
Gribov-Zwanziger theory, we show that Zwanziger's horizon function displays a
universal character. More precisely, the correlation functions of local BRST
invariant operators evaluated with the Yang-Mills action supplemented with a
BRST invariant version of the Zwanziger's horizon function and quantized in an
arbitrary class of covariant, color invariant and renormalizable gauges which
reduce to the Landau gauge when all gauge parameters are set to zero, have a
unique, gauge parameters independent result, corresponding to that of the
Landau gauge when the restriction to the Gribov region in the latter
gauge is imposed. As such, thanks to the BRST invariance, the cut-off at the
Gribov region acquires a gauge independent meaning in the class of the
physical correlators.Comment: 14 pages. v2: version accepted by Phys.Lett.
Magnetic monopole and string excitations in a two-dimensional spin ice
We study the magnetic excitations of a square lattice spin-ice recently
produced in an artificial form, as an array of nanoscale magnets. Our analysis,
based upon the dipolar interaction between the nanomagnetic islands, correctly
reproduces the ground-state observed experimentally. In addition, we find
magnetic monopole-like excitations effectively interacting by means of the
usual Coulombic plus a linear confining potential, the latter being related to
a string-like excitation binding the monopoles pairs, what indicates that the
fractionalization of magnetic dipoles may not be so easy in two dimensions.
These findings contrast this material with the three-dimensional analogue,
where such monopoles experience only the Coulombic interaction. We discuss,
however, two entropic effects that affect the monopole interactions: firstly,
the string configurational entropy may loose the string tension and then, free
magnetic monopoles should also be found in lower dimensional spin ices;
secondly, in contrast to the string configurational entropy, an entropically
driven Coulomb force, which increases with temperature, has the opposite effect
of confining the magnetic defects.Comment: 8 pages. Accepted by Journal of Applied Physics (2009
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