1,463 research outputs found
Anomalies, D-flatness and Small Instantons
Recently, Witten has proposed a mechanism for symmetry enhancement in
heterotic string theory, where the singularity obtained by shrinking
an instanton to zero size is resolved by the appearance of an gauge
symmetry. In this short letter, we consider spacetime constraints from anomaly
cancellation in six dimensions and D-flatness and demonstrate a subtlety which
arises in the moduli space when many instantons are shrunk to zero size.Comment: 8 pages, harvma
Evaluating system utility and conceptual fit using CASSM
There is a wealth of user-centred evaluation methods (UEMs) to support the analyst in assessing interactive systems. Many of these support detailed aspects of use â for example: Is the feedback helpful? Are labels appropriate? Is the task structure optimal? Few UEMs encourage the analyst to step back and consider how well a system supports usersâ conceptual understandings and system utility. In this paper, we present CASSM, a method which focuses on the quality of âfitâ between users and an interactive system. We describe the methodology of conducting a CASSM analysis and illustrate the approach with three contrasting worked examples (a robotic arm, a digital library system and a drawing tool) that demonstrate different depths of analysis. We show how CASSM can help identify re-design possibilities to improve system utility. CASSM complements established evaluation methods by focusing on conceptual structures rather than procedures. Prototype tool support for completing a CASSM analysis is provided by Cassata, an open source development
The non-abelian D-brane effective action through order
Requiring the existence of certain BPS solutions to the equations of motion,
we determine the bosonic part of the non-abelian D-brane effective action
through order . We also propose an economic organizational
principle for the effective action.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, JHEP styl
Probabilistic expert systems for handling artifacts in complex DNA mixtures
This paper presents a coherent probabilistic framework for taking account of allelic dropout, stutter bands and silent alleles when interpreting STR DNA profiles from a mixture sample using peak size information arising from a PCR analysis. This information can be exploited for evaluating the evidential strength for a hypothesis that DNA from a particular person is present in the mixture. It extends an earlier Bayesian network approach that ignored such artifacts. We illustrate the use of the extended network on a published casework example
Lipogenesis and redox balance in nitrogen-fixing pea bacteroids
Within legume root nodules, rhizobia differentiate into bacteroids that oxidise host-derived dicarboxylic acids, which is assumed to occur via the TCA-cycle to generate NAD(P)H for reduction of N2. Metabolic flux analysis of laboratory grown Rhizobium leguminosarum showed that the flux from 13C-succinate was consistent with respiration of an obligate aerobe growing on a TCA-cycle intermediate as the sole carbon source. However, the instability of fragile pea bacteroids prevented their steady state labelling under N2-fixing conditons. Therefore, comparitive metabolomic profiling was used to compare free-living R. leguminosarum with pea bacteroids. While the TCA-cycle was shown to be essential for maximal rates of N2-fixation, pyruvate (5.5-fold down), acetyl-CoA (50-fold down), free coenzyme A (33-fold) and citrate (4.5-fold down) were much lower in bacteroids. Instead of completely oxidising acetyl-CoA, pea bacteroids channel it into both lipid and the lipid-like polymer poly-ÎČ-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), the latter via a type II PHB synthase that is only active in bacteroids. Lipogenesis may be a fundamental requirement of the redox poise of electron donation to N2 in all legume nodules. Direct reduction by NAD(P)H of the likely electron donors for nitrogenase, such as ferredoxin, is inconsistent with their redox potentials. Instead, bacteroids must balance the production of NAD(P)H from oxidation of acetyl-CoA in the TCA-cycle with its storage in PHB and lipids
Expanded Strings in the Background of NS5-branes via a M2-brane, a D2-brane and D0-branes
Classical configurations of a M2-brane, a D2-brane and D0-branes are
investigated in the background of an infinite array of M5-branes or NS5-branes.
On the M2-brane, we discuss three kinds of configurations, such as a sphere, a
cylinder and a torus-like one. These are stabilized by virtue of the background
fluxes of M5-branes. The torus-like M2-brane configuration has winding and
momentum numbers of 11th direction, and in terms of the type IIA superstring
theory, this corresponds to a torus-like D2-brane with electric and magnetic
fluxes on it. We also reproduce the same configuration from a non-abelian
Born-Infeld action for D0-branes. It will be a construction of closed strings
from D0-branes. An electric flux quantization condition on the D2-brane is also
discussed in terms of D0-branes.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figures, references and footnote added, confusing
expressions and introduction are improved, version to appear in JHE
On the spectrum of AdS/CFT beyond supergravity
We test the spectrum of string theory on AdS_5 x S^5 derived in
hep-th/0305052 against that of single-trace gauge invariant operators in free
N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. Masses of string excitations at critical tension
are derived by extrapolating plane-wave frequencies at g_{YM}=0 down to finite
J. On the SYM side, we present a systematic description of the spectrum of
single-trace operators and its reduction to PSU(2,2|4) superconformal primaries
via a refined Eratostenes' supersieve. We perform the comparison of the
resulting SYM/string spectra of charges and multiplicities order by order in
the conformal dimension \Delta up to \Delta=10 and find perfect agreement.
Interestingly, the SYM/string massive spectrum exhibits a hidden symmetry
structure larger than expected, with bosonic subgroup SO(10,2) and thirty-two
supercharges.Comment: 28 pages, LaTeX2
Superfield T-duality rules
A geometric treatment of T-duality as an operation which acts on differential
forms in superspace allows us to derive the complete set of T-duality
transformation rules which relate the superfield potentials of D=10 type IIA
supergravity with those of type IIB supergravity including Ramond-Ramond
superfield potentials and fermionic supervielbeins. We show that these rules
are consistent with the superspace supergravity constraints.Comment: 24 pages, latex, no figures. V2 misprints corrected. V3. One
reference ([30]) and a comment on it ('Notice added') on p. 19 adde
Locally wrapped D-branes
We find examples in string theory of locally wrapped D-branes. These
excitations mimic skyrmions in that they correspond to topological excitations
of the scalar fields parametrizing the brane motion in the space transverse to
its world-volume. While these brane excitations appear to be point-like,
evidence is provided that curvature corrections to the probe action might allow
for a delocalization of the wrapping on a scale of the order of the string
length, therefore rendering the phenomena non-singular.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Finding the complement of the invariant manifolds transverse to a given foliation for a 3D flow
A method is presented to establish regions of phase space for 3D vector fields through which pass no co-oriented invariant 2D submanifolds transverse to a given oriented 1D foliation. Refinements are given for the cases of volume-preserving or Cartan-Arnolâd Hamiltonian flows and for boundaryless submanifolds
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