410 research outputs found
Strong coupling in Horava gravity
By studying perturbations about the vacuum, we show that Horava gravity
suffers from two different strong coupling problems, extending all the way into
the deep infra-red. The first of these is associated with the principle of
detailed balance and explains why solutions to General Relativity are typically
not recovered in models that preserve this structure. The second of these
occurs even without detailed balance and is associated with the breaking of
diffeomorphism invariance, required for anisotropic scaling in the UV. Since
there is a reduced symmetry group there are additional degrees of freedom,
which need not decouple in the infra-red. Indeed, we use the Stuckelberg trick
to show that one of these extra modes become strongly coupled as the parameters
approach their desired infra-red fixed point. Whilst we can evade the first
strong coupling problem by breaking detailed balance, we cannot avoid the
second, whatever the form of the potential. Therefore the original Horava
model, and its "phenomenologically viable" extensions do not have a
perturbative General Relativity limit at any scale. Experiments which confirm
the perturbative gravitational wave prediction of General Relativity, such as
the cumulative shift of the periastron time of binary pulsars, will presumably
rule out the theory.Comment: 11 page
The Black Hole and Cosmological Solutions in IR modified Horava Gravity
Recently Horava proposed a renormalizable gravity theory in four dimensions
which reduces to Einstein gravity with a non-vanishing cosmological constant in
IR but with improved UV behaviors. Here, I study an IR modification which
breaks "softly" the detailed balance condition in Horava model and allows the
asymptotically flat limit as well. I obtain the black hole and cosmological
solutions for "arbitrary" cosmological constant that represent the analogs of
the standard Schwartzschild-(A)dS solutions which can be asymptotically (A)dS
as well as flat and I discuss some thermodynamical properties. I also obtain
solutions for FRW metric with an arbitrary cosmological constant. I study its
implication to the dark energy and find that it seems to be consistent with
current observational data.Comment: Footnote 5 about the the very meaning of the horizons and Hawking
temperature is added; Accepted in JHE
Correlation effects in ionic crystals: I. The cohesive energy of MgO
High-level quantum-chemical calculations, using the coupled-cluster approach
and extended one-particle basis sets, have been performed for (Mg2+)n (O2-)m
clusters embedded in a Madelung potential. The results of these calculations
are used for setting up an incremental expansion for the correlation energy of
bulk MgO. This way, 96% of the experimental cohesive energy of the MgO crystal
is recovered. It is shown that only 60% of the correlation contribution to the
cohesive energy is of intra-ionic origin, the remaining part being caused by
van der Waals-like inter-ionic excitations.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, no figure
Magnetic fields in supernova remnants and pulsar-wind nebulae
We review the observations of supernova remnants (SNRs) and pulsar-wind
nebulae (PWNe) that give information on the strength and orientation of
magnetic fields. Radio polarimetry gives the degree of order of magnetic
fields, and the orientation of the ordered component. Many young shell
supernova remnants show evidence for synchrotron X-ray emission. The spatial
analysis of this emission suggests that magnetic fields are amplified by one to
two orders of magnitude in strong shocks. Detection of several remnants in TeV
gamma rays implies a lower limit on the magnetic-field strength (or a
measurement, if the emission process is inverse-Compton upscattering of cosmic
microwave background photons). Upper limits to GeV emission similarly provide
lower limits on magnetic-field strengths. In the historical shell remnants,
lower limits on B range from 25 to 1000 microGauss. Two remnants show
variability of synchrotron X-ray emission with a timescale of years. If this
timescale is the electron-acceleration or radiative loss timescale, magnetic
fields of order 1 mG are also implied. In pulsar-wind nebulae, equipartition
arguments and dynamical modeling can be used to infer magnetic-field strengths
anywhere from about 5 microGauss to 1 mG. Polarized fractions are considerably
higher than in SNRs, ranging to 50 or 60% in some cases; magnetic-field
geometries often suggest a toroidal structure around the pulsar, but this is
not universal. Viewing-angle effects undoubtedly play a role. MHD models of
radio emission in shell SNRs show that different orientations of upstream
magnetic field, and different assumptions about electron acceleration, predict
different radio morphology. In the remnant of SN 1006, such comparisons imply a
magnetic-field orientation connecting the bright limbs, with a non-negligible
gradient of its strength across the remnant.Comment: 20 pages, 24 figures; to be published in SpSciRev. Minor wording
change in Abstrac
Caustic avoidance in Horava-Lifshitz gravity
There are at least four versions of Horava-Lishitz gravity in the literature.
We consider the version without the detailed balance condition with the
projectability condition and address one aspect of the theory: avoidance of
caustics for constant time hypersurfaces. We show that there is no caustic with
plane symmetry in the absence of matter source if \lambda\ne 1. If \lambda=1 is
a stable IR fixed point of the renormalization group flow then \lambda is
expected to deviate from 1 near would-be caustics, where the extrinsic
curvature increases and high-energy corrections become important. Therefore,
the absence of caustics with \lambda\ne 1 implies that caustics cannot form
with this symmetry in the absence of matter source. We argue that inclusion of
matter source will not change the conclusion. We also argue that caustics with
codimension higher than one will not form because of repulsive gravity
generated by nonlinear higher curvature terms. These arguments support our
conjecture that there is no caustic for constant time hypersurfaces. Finally,
we discuss implications to the recently proposed scenario of ``dark matter as
integration constant''.Comment: 19 pages; extended to general z \geq 3, typos corrected (v2); version
accepted for publication in JCAP (v3
Extremal black holes in the Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity
We study the near-horizon geometry of extremal black holes in the
Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity with a flow parameter . For ,
near-horizon geometry of extremal black holes are AdS with
different radii, depending on the (modified) Ho\v{r}ava-Lifshitz gravity. For
, the radius of is negative, which means
that the near-horizon geometry is ill-defined and the corresponding
Bekenstein-Hawking entropy is zero. We show explicitly that the entropy
function approach does not work for obtaining the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of
extremal black holes.Comment: 18 pages, v2:some points on Lifshitz black holes claified, v3:
version to appear in EJP
Weak Localization Effect in Superconductors by Radiation Damage
Large reductions of the superconducting transition temperature and
the accompanying loss of the thermal electrical resistivity (electron-phonon
interaction) due to radiation damage have been observed for several A15
compounds, Chevrel phase and Ternary superconductors, and in
the high fluence regime. We examine these behaviors based on the recent theory
of weak localization effect in superconductors. We find a good fitting to the
experimental data. In particular, weak localization correction to the
phonon-mediated interaction is derived from the density correlation function.
It is shown that weak localization has a strong influence on both the
phonon-mediated interaction and the electron-phonon interaction, which leads to
the universal correlation of and resistance ratio.Comment: 16 pages plus 3 figures, revtex, 76 references, For more information,
Plesse see http://www.fen.bilkent.edu.tr/~yjki
Constraints on Dark Matter Annihilation in Clusters of Galaxies with the Fermi Large Area Telescope
Nearby clusters and groups of galaxies are potentially bright sources of
high-energy gamma-ray emission resulting from the pair-annihilation of dark
matter particles. However, no significant gamma-ray emission has been detected
so far from clusters in the first 11 months of observations with the Fermi
Large Area Telescope. We interpret this non-detection in terms of constraints
on dark matter particle properties. In particular for leptonic annihilation
final states and particle masses greater than ~200 GeV, gamma-ray emission from
inverse Compton scattering of CMB photons is expected to dominate the dark
matter annihilation signal from clusters, and our gamma-ray limits exclude
large regions of the parameter space that would give a good fit to the recent
anomalous Pamela and Fermi-LAT electron-positron measurements. We also present
constraints on the annihilation of more standard dark matter candidates, such
as the lightest neutralino of supersymmetric models. The constraints are
particularly strong when including the fact that clusters are known to contain
substructure at least on galaxy scales, increasing the expected gamma-ray flux
by a factor of ~5 over a smooth-halo assumption. We also explore the effect of
uncertainties in cluster dark matter density profiles, finding a systematic
uncertainty in the constraints of roughly a factor of two, but similar overall
conclusions. In this work, we focus on deriving limits on dark matter models; a
more general consideration of the Fermi-LAT data on clusters and clusters as
gamma-ray sources is forthcoming.Comment: accepted to JCAP, Corresponding authors: T.E. Jeltema and S. Profumo,
minor revisions to be consistent with accepted versio
Dopaminergic Neuronal Imaging in Genetic Parkinson's Disease: Insights into Pathogenesis
Objectives:To compare the dopaminergic neuronal imaging features of different subtypes of genetic Parkinson's Disease.Methods:A retrospective study of genetic Parkinson's diseases cases in which DaTSCAN (123I-FP-CIT) had been performed. Specific non-displaceable binding was calculated for bilateral caudate and putamen for each case. The right:left asymmetry index and striatal asymmetry index was calculated.Results:Scans were available from 37 cases of monogenetic Parkinson's disease (7 glucocerebrosidase (GBA) mutations, 8 alpha-synuclein, 3 LRRK2, 7 PINK1, 12 Parkin). The asymmetry of radioligand uptake for Parkinson's disease with GBA or LRRK2 mutations was greater than that for Parkinson's disease with alpha synuclein, PINK1 or Parkin mutations.Conclusions:The asymmetry of radioligand uptake in Parkinsons disease associated with GBA or LRRK2 mutations suggests that interactions with additional genetic or environmental factors may be associated with dopaminergic neuronal loss
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