98 research outputs found
Phases of Braneworlds, Spinning D3-branes and Strongly-Coupled Gauge Theories
A spinning nonextremal D3-brane undergoes a phase transition to a naked
singularity which, from the braneworld point of view, corresponds to the
apparent graviton speed passing from subluminal to superluminal. We investigate
this phase transition from the dual perspectives of braneworld scenarios and
holography. We discuss the relevance of the thermodynamic stability domains of
a spinning D3-brane to the physics of braneworld scenarios. We also describe
various gravitational Lorentz violations which arise from static D3-branes.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, LaTeX, additional comment and reference
Resolving the M2-brane
We construct deformed, T^2 wrapped, rotating M2-branes on a resolved cone
over Q^{1,1,1} and Q^{1,1,1}/Z_2, as well as on a product of two Eguchi-Hanson
instantons. All worldvolume directions of these supersymmetric and regular
solutions are fibred over the transverse space. These constitute gravity duals
of D=3, N=2 gauge theories. In particular, the deformed M2-brane on a resolved
cone over Q^{1,1,1} and the S^1 wrapped M2-brane on a resolved cone over
Q^{1,1,1}/Z_2 provide explicit realizations of holographic renormalization
group flows in M-theory for which both conformal and Lorentz symmetries are
broken in the IR region and restored in the UV limit. These solutions can be
dualized to supersymmetric type IIB pp-waves, which are rendered non-singular
either by additional flux or a twisted time-like direction.Comment: Latex, 23 pages, references adde
Supergravity brane worlds and tachyon potentials
We study massless and massive graviton modes that bind on thick branes which
are supergravity domain walls solutions in -dimensional supergravity
theories where only the supergravity multiplet and the scalar supermultiplet
are turned on. The domain walls are bulk solutions provided by tachyon
potentials. Such domain walls are regarded as BPS branes of one lower dimension
that are formed due to tachyon potentials on a non-BPS D-brane.Comment: RevTex4, 6 pages; version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Automated real-time collection of pathogen-specific diagnostic data: Syndromic infectious disease epidemiology
© Lindsay Meyers, Christine C Ginocchio, Aimie N Faucett, Frederick S Nolte, Per H Gesteland, Amy Leber, Diane Janowiak,. Background: Health care and public health professionals rely on accurate, real-time monitoring of infectious diseases for outbreak preparedness and response. Early detection of outbreaks is improved by systems that are comprehensive and specific with respect to the pathogen but are rapid in reporting the data. It has proven difficult to implement these requirements on a large scale while maintaining patient privacy. Objective: The aim of this study was to demonstrate the automated export, aggregation, and analysis of infectious disease diagnostic test results from clinical laboratories across the United States in a manner that protects patient confidentiality. We hypothesized that such a system could aid in monitoring the seasonal occurrence of respiratory pathogens and may have advantages with regard to scope and ease of reporting compared with existing surveillance systems. Methods: We describe a system, BioFire Syndromic Trends, for rapid disease reporting that is syndrome-based but pathogen-specific. Deidentified patient test results from the BioFire FilmArray multiplex molecular diagnostic system are sent directly to a cloud database. Summaries of these data are displayed in near real time on the Syndromic Trends public website. We studied this dataset for the prevalence, seasonality, and coinfections of the 20 respiratory pathogens detected in over 362,000 patient samples acquired as a standard-of-care testing over the last 4 years from 20 clinical laboratories in the United States. Results: The majority of pathogens show influenza-like seasonality, rhinovirus has fall and spring peaks, and adenovirus and the bacterial pathogens show constant detection over the year. The dataset can also be considered in an ecological framework; the viruses and bacteria detected by this test are parasites of a host (the human patient). Interestingly, the rate of pathogen codetections, on average 7.94% (28,741/362,101), matches predictions based on the relative abundance of organisms present. Conclusions: Syndromic Trends preserves patient privacy by removing or obfuscating patient identifiers while still collecting much useful information about the bacterial and viral pathogens that they harbor. Test results are uploaded to the database within a few hours of completion compared with delays of up to 10 days for other diagnostic-based reporting systems. This work shows that the barriers to establishing epidemiology systems are no longer scientific and technical but rather administrative, involving questions of patient privacy and data ownership. We have demonstrated here that these barriers can be overcome. This first look at the resulting data stream suggests that Syndromic Trends will be able to provide high-resolution analysis of circulating respiratory pathogens and may aid in the detection of new outbreaks
A Note on Einstein Sasaki Metrics in D \ge 7
In this paper, we obtain new non-singular Einstein-Sasaki spaces in
dimensions D\ge 7. The local construction involves taking a circle bundle over
a (D-1)-dimensional Einstein-Kahler metric that is itself constructed as a
complex line bundle over a product of Einstein-Kahler spaces. In general the
resulting Einstein-Sasaki spaces are singular, but if parameters in the local
solutions satisfy appropriate rationality conditions, the metrics extend
smoothly onto complete and non-singular compact manifolds.Comment: Latex, 13 page
Precarious, Always-On and Flexible: A Case Study of Academics as Information Workers
The higher education landscape has changed in the last decades. The neoliberal restructuring of universities has led to transformations such as reducing public expenditure, allocating resources based on competition and quasi-market disciplines. These structural transformations have also an effect on the working conditions, practices and relations of subjects within universities. Questions that need to be addressed: How do different working contexts and conditions in the academia shape feelings of autonomy, flexibility and reputation on the one hand and precariousness, overwork and dissatisfaction on the other? What are the broader political realities and potentials in terms of solidarity, participation and democracy at universities? I address these questions based on a theoretical analysis and qualitative interviews with precariously employed academics
From de Sitter to de Sitter
We obtain D=6, N=(1,1) de Sitter supergravity from a hyperbolic reduction of
the massive type IIA* theory. We construct a smooth cosmological solution in
which the co-moving time runs from an infinite past, which is dS_4\times S^2,
to an infinite future, which is a dS_6-type spacetime with the boundary
R^3\times S^2. This provides an effective four-dimensional cosmological model
with two compact extra dimensions forming an S^2. Interestingly enough,
although the solution is time-dependent, it arises from a first-order system
via a superpotential construction. We lift the solutions back to D=10, and in
particular obtain two smooth embeddings of dS_4 in massive type IIA*, with the
internal space being either H^4\times S^2 or an H^4 bundle over S^2. We also
obtain the analogous D=5 and D=4 solutions. We show that there exist
cosmological solutions that describe an expanding universe with the expansion
rate significantly larger in the past than in the future.Comment: Latex three times, 22 pages, references adde
The Energy of a Moving Quark-Antiquark Pair in an N=4 SYM Plasma
We make use of the AdS/CFT correspondence to determine the energy of an
external quark-antiquark pair that moves through strongly-coupled thermal N=4
super-Yang-Mills plasma, both in the rest frame of the plasma and in the rest
frame of the pair. It is found that the pair feels no drag force, has an energy
that reproduces the expected 1/L (or gamma/L) behavior at small quark-antiquark
separations, and becomes unbound beyond a certain screening length whose
velocity-dependence we determine. We discuss the relation between the
high-velocity limit of our results and the lightlike Wilson loop proposed
recently as a definition of the jet-quenching parameter.Comment: LaTeX 2e, 27 pages, 8 eps figures; v2: added computation of the pair
energy in the plasma rest frame, clarified the comparison with
hep-ph/0607062, corrected typos, added reference
Energy Loss of Gluons, Baryons and k-Quarks in an N=4 SYM Plasma
We consider different types of external color sources that move through a
strongly-coupled thermal N=4 super-Yang-Mills plasma, and calculate, via the
AdS/CFT correspondence, the dissipative force (or equivalently, the rate of
energy loss) they experience. A bound state of k quarks in the totally
antisymmetric representation is found to feel a force with a nontrivial
k-dependence. Our result for k=1 (or k=N-1) agrees at large N with the one
obtained recently by Herzog et al. and Gubser, but contains in addition an
infinite series of 1/N corrections. The baryon (k=N) is seen to experience no
drag. Finally, a heavy gluon is found to be subject to a force which at large N
is twice as large as the one experienced by a heavy quark, in accordance with
gauge theory expectations.Comment: Latex 2e, 24 pages, 1 eps figure; v2: slightly amplified discussion
on the relation between the drag force and the tension of a spatial Wilson
loop; v3: minor changes, version to appear in JHE
Gravity localization in a string-cigar braneworld
We proposed a six dimensional string-like braneworld built from a warped
product between a 3-brane and the Hamilton cigar soliton space, the
string-cigar braneworld. This transverse manifold is a well-known steady
solution of the Ricci flow equation that describes the evolution of a manifold.
The resulting bulk is an interior and exterior metric for a thick string. This
is a physical and feasible scenario since the source satisfies the dominant
energy condition. It is possible to realize the geometric flow as a result of
variations of the matter content of the brane, actually, as its tensions.
Furthermore, the Ricci flow defines a family of string-like branes and we
studied the effects that the evolution of the transverse space has on the
geometric and physical quantities. The geometric flow makes the cosmological
constant and the relationship between the Planck masses evolves. The
gravitational massless mode remains trapped to the brane and the width of the
mode depends on the evolution parameter. For the Kaluza-Klein modes, the
asymptotic spectrum of mass is the same as for the thin string-like brane and
the analogue Schroedinger potential also changes according to the flow.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures. We include new discussion about gravitational
perturbation analysis and some new references. Results unchanged. Version to
appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
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