1,548 research outputs found
Rotating Dilaton Black Holes
We consider the axially symmetric coupled system of gravitation,
electromagnetism and a dilaton field. Reducing from four to three dimensions,
the system is described by gravity coupled to a non-linear -model. We
find the target space isometries and use them to generate new solutions. It
seems that it is only possible to generate rotating solutions from non-rotating
ones for the special cases when the dilaton coupling parameter . For those particular values, the target space symmetry is enlarged.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex, one figure include
A precise approximation for directed percolation in d=1+1
We introduce an approximation specific to a continuous model for directed
percolation, which is strictly equivalent to 1+1 dimensional directed bond
percolation. We find that the critical exponent associated to the order
parameter (percolation probability) is beta=(1-1/\sqrt{5})/2=0.276393202..., in
remarkable agreement with the best current numerical estimate beta=0.276486(8).Comment: 4 pages, 3 EPS figures; Submitted to Physical Review Letters v2:
minor typos + 1 major typo in Eq. (30) correcte
Black Hole Evaporation in the Presence of a Short Distance Cutoff
A derivation of the Hawking effect is given which avoids reference to field
modes above some cutoff frequency in the free-fall frame
of the black hole. To avoid reference to arbitrarily high frequencies, it is
necessary to impose a boundary condition on the quantum field in a timelike
region near the horizon, rather than on a (spacelike) Cauchy surface either
outside the horizon or at early times before the horizon forms. Due to the
nature of the horizon as an infinite redshift surface, the correct boundary
condition at late times outside the horizon cannot be deduced, within the
confines of a theory that applies only below the cutoff, from initial
conditions prior to the formation of the hole. A boundary condition is
formulated which leads to the Hawking effect in a cutoff theory. It is argued
that it is possible the boundary condition is {\it not} satisfied, so that the
spectrum of black hole radiation may be significantly different from that
predicted by Hawking, even without the back-reaction near the horizon becoming
of order unity relative to the curvature.Comment: 35 pages, plain LaTeX, UMDGR93-32, NSF-ITP-93-2
Diffusion Limited Aggregation with Power-Law Pinning
Using stochastic conformal mapping techniques we study the patterns emerging
from Laplacian growth with a power-law decaying threshold for growth
(where is the radius of the particle cluster). For
the growth pattern is in the same universality class as diffusion
limited aggregation (DLA) growth, while for the resulting patterns
have a lower fractal dimension than a DLA cluster due to the
enhancement of growth at the hot tips of the developing pattern. Our results
indicate that a pinning transition occurs at , significantly
smaller than might be expected from the lower bound
of multifractal spectrum of DLA. This limiting case shows that the most
singular tips in the pruned cluster now correspond to those expected for a
purely one-dimensional line. Using multifractal analysis, analytic expressions
are established for both close to the breakdown of DLA universality
class, i.e., , and close to the pinning transition, i.e.,
.Comment: 5 pages, e figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Epidemic processes with immunization
We study a model of directed percolation (DP) with immunization, i.e. with
different probabilities for the first infection and subsequent infections. The
immunization effect leads to an additional non-Markovian term in the
corresponding field theoretical action. We consider immunization as a small
perturbation around the DP fixed point in d<6, where the non-Markovian term is
relevant. The immunization causes the system to be driven away from the
neighbourhood of the DP critical point. In order to investigate the dynamical
critical behaviour of the model, we consider the limits of low and high first
infection rate, while the second infection rate remains constant at the DP
critical value. Scaling arguments are applied to obtain an expression for the
survival probability in both limits. The corresponding exponents are written in
terms of the critical exponents for ordinary DP and DP with a wall. We find
that the survival probability does not obey a power law behaviour, decaying
instead as a stretched exponential in the low first infection probability limit
and to a constant in the high first infection probability limit. The
theoretical predictions are confirmed by optimized numerical simulations in 1+1
dimensions.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures. v.2: minor correction
Free initial wave packets and the long-time behavior of the survival and nonescape probabilities
The behavior of both the survival S(t) and nonescape P(t) probabilities at
long times for the one-dimensional free particle system is shown to be closely
connected to that of the initial wave packet at small momentum. We prove that
both S(t) and P(t) asymptotically exhibit the same power-law decrease at long
times, when the initial wave packet in momentum representation behaves as O(1)
or O(k) at small momentum. On the other hand, if the integer m becomes greater
than 1, S(t) and P(t) decrease in different power-laws at long times.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Title and organization changed, however the
results not changed, To appear in Phys. Rev.
Economic and Market Analysis of CO2 Utilization Technologies â Focus on CO2 derived from North Dakota lignite
AbstractBased on information obtained about the technical aspects of the technologies, several challenges are expected to be faced by any potential CO2 utilization technologies intended for North Dakota lignite plants. The weather, alkaline content of lignite fly ash, and space limitations in the immediate vicinity of existing power plants are challenging hurdles to overcome. Currently, no CO2 utilization option is ready for implementation or integration with North Dakota power plants. Mineralization technologies suffer from the lack of a well-defined product and insufficient alkalinity in lignite fly ash. Algae and microalgae technologies are not economically feasible and will have weather- related challenges
Averaged Energy Conditions and Evaporating Black Holes
In this paper the averaged weak (AWEC) and averaged null (ANEC) energy
conditions, together with uncertainty principle-type restrictions on negative
energy (``quantum inequalities''), are examined in the context of evaporating
black hole backgrounds in both two and four dimensions. In particular,
integrals over only half-geodesics are studied. We determine the regions of the
spacetime in which the averaged energy conditions are violated. In all cases
where these conditions fail, there appear to be quantum inequalities which
bound the magnitude and extent of the negative energy, and hence the degree of
the violation. The possible relevance of these results for the validity of
singularity theorems in evaporating black hole spacetimes is discussed.Comment: Sections 2.1 and 2.2 have been revised and some erroneous statements
corrected. The main conclusions and the figures are unchanged. 27 pp, plain
Latex, 3 figures available upon reques
Logarithmic Corrections in Dynamic Isotropic Percolation
Based on the field theoretic formulation of the general epidemic process we
study logarithmic corrections to scaling in dynamic isotropic percolation at
the upper critical dimension d=6. Employing renormalization group methods we
determine these corrections for some of the most interesting time dependent
observables in dynamic percolation at the critical point up to and including
the next to leading correction. For clusters emanating from a local seed at the
origin we calculate the number of active sites, the survival probability as
well as the radius of gyration.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Equilibrium Properties of A Monomer-Monomer Catalytic Reaction on A One-Dimensional Chain
We study the equilibrium properties of a lattice-gas model of an catalytic reaction on a one-dimensional chain in contact with a reservoir
for the particles. The particles of species and are in thermal contact
with their vapor phases acting as reservoirs, i.e., they may adsorb onto empty
lattice sites and may desorb from the lattice. If adsorbed and
particles appear at neighboring lattice sites they instantaneously react and
both desorb. For this model of a catalytic reaction in the
adsorption-controlled limit, we derive analytically the expression of the
pressure and present exact results for the mean densities of particles and for
the compressibilities of the adsorbate as function of the chemical potentials
of the two species.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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