1,112 research outputs found
Fearless: Aleksandra Petkova
Consistently serving the campus community, conducting new research in psychology, and leading younger students to realizations about their own roles in fighting for social Justice, Aleksandra Petkova ’14 has fearlessly pursued opportunities to promote social change all four of her years here at Gettysburg
Fusion Rings Related to Affine Weyl Groups
The construction of the fusion ring of a quasi-rational CFT based on
at generic level is reviewed. It is a
commutative ring generated by formal characters, elements in the group ring
of the extended affine Weyl group of
. Some partial results towards the
generalisation of this character ring are presented.Comment: 13 pages; two figures. Talk at ``Lie Theory and Its Applications in
Physics III'', Clausthal, 11-14 July, 1999, to appear in the Proceedings,
eds. H.-D. Doebner et a
Generalised twisted partition functions
We consider the set of partition functions that result from the insertion of
twist operators compatible with conformal invariance in a given 2D Conformal
Field Theory (CFT). A consistency equation, which gives a classification of
twists, is written and solved in particular cases. This generalises old results
on twisted torus boundary conditions, gives a physical interpretation of
Ocneanu's algebraic construction, and might offer a new route to the study of
properties of CFT.Comment: 12 pages, harvmac, 1 Table, 1 Figure . Minor typos corrected, the
figure which had vanished reappears
Conformal Boundary Conditions and what they teach us
The question of boundary conditions in conformal field theories is discussed,
in the light of recent progress. Two kinds of boundary conditions are examined,
along open boundaries of the system, or along closed curves or ``seams''.
Solving consistency conditions known as Cardy equation is shown to amount to
the algebraic problem of finding integer valued representations of (one or two
copies of) the fusion algebra. Graphs encode these boundary conditions in a
natural way, but are also relevant in several aspects of physics ``in the
bulk''. Quantum algebras attached to these graphs contain information on
structure constants of the operator algebra, on the Boltzmann weights of the
corresponding integrable lattice models etc. Thus the study of boundary
conditions in Conformal Field Theory offers a new perspective on several old
physical problems and offers an explicit realisation of recent mathematical
concepts.Comment: Expanded version of lectures given at the Summer School and
Conference Nonperturbative Quantum Field Theoretic Methods and their
Applications, August 2000, Budapest, Hungary. 35 page
An Extension of the Character Ring of sl(3) and Its Quantisation
We construct a commutative ring with identity which extends the ring of
characters of finite dimensional representations of sl(3). It is generated by
characters with values in the group ring of the extended affine
Weyl group of at . The `quantised' version at
rational level realises the fusion rules of a WZW conformal field
theory based on admissible representations of .Comment: contains two TeX files: main file using harvmac.tex, amssym.def,
amssym.tex, 35p.; file with figures using XY-pic package, 4p; v2: minor
corrections, Note adde
Stellar feedback by radiation pressure and photoionization
The relative impact of radiation pressure and photoionization feedback from
young stars on surrounding gas is studied with hydrodynamic radiative transfer
(RT) simulations. The calculations focus on the single-scattering (direct
radiation pressure) and optically thick regime, and adopt a moment-based
RT-method implemented in the moving-mesh code AREPO. The source luminosity, gas
density profile and initial temperature are varied. At typical temperatures and
densities of molecular clouds, radiation pressure drives velocities of order
~20 km/s over 1-5 Myr; enough to unbind the smaller clouds. However, these
estimates ignore the effects of photoionization that naturally occur
concurrently. When radiation pressure and photoionization act together, the
latter is substantially more efficient, inducing velocities comparable to the
sound speed of the hot ionized medium (10-15 km/s) on timescales far shorter
than required for accumulating similar momentum with radiation pressure. This
mismatch allows photoionization to dominate the feedback as the heating and
expansion of gas lowers the central densities, further diminishing the impact
of radiation pressure. Our results indicate that a proper treatment of the
impact of young stars on the interstellar medium needs to primarily account for
their ionization power whereas direct radiation pressure appears to be a
secondary effect. This conclusion may change if extreme boosts of the radiation
pressure by photon trapping are assumed.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figures (main results presented in 13 pages, 10 figures;
extended appendix for RT tests with extra 9 figures). Accepted for
publication in MNRAS after tiny change
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