8,202 research outputs found
The role of Background Independence for Asymptotic Safety in Quantum Einstein Gravity
We discuss various basic conceptual issues related to coarse graining flows
in quantum gravity. In particular the requirement of background independence is
shown to lead to renormalization group (RG) flows which are significantly
different from their analogs on a rigid background spacetime. The importance of
these findings for the asymptotic safety approach to Quantum Einstein Gravity
(QEG) is demonstrated in a simplified setting where only the conformal factor
is quantized. We identify background independence as a (the ?) key prerequisite
for the existence of a non-Gaussian RG fixed point and the renormalizability of
QEG.Comment: 2 figures. Talk given by M.R. at the WE-Heraeus-Seminar "Quantum
Gravity: Challenges and Perspectives", Bad Honnef, April 14-16, 2008; to
appear in General Relativity and Gravitatio
Renormalization of the Topological Charge in Yang-Mills Theory
The conditions leading to a nontrivial renormalization of the topological
charge in four--dimensional Yang--Mills theory are discussed. It is shown that
if the topological term is regarded as the limit of a certain nontopological
interaction, quantum effects due to the gauge bosons lead to a finite
multiplicative renormalization of the theta--parameter while fermions give rise
to an additional shift of theta. A truncated form of an exact renormalization
group equation is used to study the scale dependence of the theta--parameter.
Possible implications for the strong CP--problem of QCD are discussed.Comment: 31 pages, late
First-principles kinetic Monte Carlo simulations for heterogeneous catalysis, applied to the CO oxidation at RuO2(110)
We describe a first-principles statistical mechanics approach enabling us to
simulate the steady-state situation of heterogeneous catalysis. In a first step
density-functional theory together with transition-state theory is employed to
obtain the energetics of all relevant elementary processes. Subsequently the
statistical mechanics problem is solved by the kinetic Monte Carlo method,
which fully accounts for the correlations, fluctuations, and spatial
distributions of the chemicals at the surface of the catalyst under
steady-state conditions. Applying this approach to the catalytic oxidation of
CO at RuO2(110), we determine the surface atomic structure and composition in
reactive environments ranging from ultra-high vacuum (UHV) to technologically
relevant conditions, i.e. up to pressures of several atmospheres and elevated
temperatures. We also compute the CO2 formation rates (turnover frequencies).
The results are in quantitative agreement with all existing experimental data.
We find that the high catalytic activity of this system is intimately connected
with a disordered, dynamic surface ``phase'' with significant compositional
fluctuations. In this active state the catalytic function results from a
self-regulating interplay of several elementary processes.Comment: 18 pages including 9 figures; related publications can be found at
http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/th.htm
The heat-kernel and the average effective potential
We discuss the definition of the average effective action in terms of the
heat-kernel. As an example we examine a model describing a self-interacting
scalar field, both in flat and curved background, and study the renormalization
group flow of some of the parameters characterizing its effective potential.
Some implications of the running of these parameters for inflationary cosmology
are also briefly discussed.Comment: 9 pages, plain-Te
Quantum Gravity effects near the null black hole singularity
The structure of the Cauchy Horizon singularity of a black hole formed in a
generic collapse is studied by means of a renormalization group equation for
quantum gravity. It is shown that during the early evolution of the Cauchy
Horizon the increase of the mass function is damped when quantum fluctuations
of the metric are taken into account.Comment: 15 Pages, one figure. Minor changes in the presentation, to appear on
Phys.Rev.
Running Gauge Coupling in Asymptotically Safe Quantum Gravity
We investigate the non-perturbative renormalization group behavior of the
gauge coupling constant using a truncated form of the functional flow equation
for the effective average action of the Yang-Mills-gravity system. We find a
non-zero quantum gravity correction to the standard Yang-Mills beta function
which has the same sign as the gauge boson contribution. Our results fit into
the picture according to which Quantum Einstein Gravity (QEG) is asymptotically
safe, with a vanishing gauge coupling constant at the non-trivial fixed point.Comment: 27 page
Blue-fluorescence of NADPH as an indicator of marine primary production
Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate (NADPH) is the primary product of photosynthesisand can therefore serve as an indicator of biomass and photosynthetic activity. Pure NADPH whichis the reduced form of NADP shows an absorption maximum at 340 nm and a maximum of emissionat 460 nm. NADPH concentrations in terrestrial vegetation have already been studied since1957 in great detail with optical methods. However, its potential as a biomass parameter of oceanicphytoplankton which can be assessed in situ and remotely with fluorescence spectroscopy has notyet been investigated.In this paper, we report on laboratory investigations of the blue-fluorescence spectrum in algalsuspensions of Chlorella and Thalassiosira when excited with UV-A light. It is shown that cell densitiesof about 106 per litre as they are typically found under natural conditions are too low for precisedetection of NADPH fluorescence, while concentrated samples with 108-1010 cells per litre exhibitsignificant blue-fluorescence which can be related to NADPH. Inhibition of photosynthetic activityby addition of DCMU decreases the strength of blue-fluorescence remarkably. Since NADPHis an end product of photosynthesis, changes of PAR illumination levels should directly affect itsconcentration and hence the intensity of blue-fluorescence. However, no effect of illumination onblue-fluorescence could be observed in our study. Possible reasons of these observations are discussed,and perspectives for practical applications of the method used are proposed
Fluorescent nanodiamonds for FRET-based monitoring of a single biological nanomotor FoF1-ATP synthase
Color centers in diamond nanocrystals are a new class of fluorescence markers
that attract significant interest due to matchless brightness, photostability
and biochemical inertness. Fluorescing diamond nanocrystals containing defects
can be used as markers replacing conventional organic dye molecules, quantum
dots or autofluorescent proteins. They can be applied for tracking and
ultrahigh-resolution localization of the single markers. In addition the spin
properties of diamond defects can be utilized for novel magneto-optical imaging
(MOI) with nanometer resolution. We develop this technique to unravel the
details of the rotary motions and the elastic energy storage mechanism of a
single biological nanomotor FoF1-ATP synthase. FoF1-ATP synthase is the enzyme
that provides the 'chemical energy currency' adenosine triphosphate, ATP, for
living cells. The formation of ATP is accomplished by a stepwise internal
rotation of subunits within the enzyme. Previously subunit rotation has been
monitored by single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and
was limited by the photostability of the fluorophores. Fluorescent nanodiamonds
advance these FRET measurements to long time scales.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Effects of the Running of the QCD Coupling on the Energy Loss in the Quark-Gluon Plasma
Finite temperature modifies the running of the QCD coupling alpha_s(k,T) with
resolution k. After calculating the thermal quark and gluon masses
selfconsistently, we determine the quark-quark and quark-gluon cross sections
in the plasma based on the running coupling. We find that the running coupling
enhances these cross sections by factors of two to four depending on the
temperature. We also compute the energy loss dE/dx of a high-energy quark in
the plasma as a function of temperature. Our study suggests that, beside
t-channel processes, inverse Compton scattering is a relevant process for a
quantitative understanding of the energy loss of an incident quark in a hot
plasma.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
- …