26,241 research outputs found
On the Two Obstacles Problem in Orlicz-Sobolev Spaces and Applications
We prove the Lewy-Stampacchia inequalities for the two obstacles problem in
abstract form for T-monotone operators. As a consequence for a general class of
quasi-linear elliptic operators of Ladyzhenskaya-Uraltseva type, including
p(x)-Laplacian type operators, we derive new results of
regularity for the solution. We also apply those inequalities to obtain new
results to the N-membranes problem and the regularity and monotonicity
properties to obtain the existence of a solution to a quasi-variational problem
in (generalized) Orlicz-Sobolev spaces
Locally Inertial Reference Frames in Lorentzian and Riemann-Cartan Spacetimes
In this paper we scrutinize the concept of locally inertial reference frames
(LIRF) in Lorentzian and Riemann-Cartan spacetime structures. We present
rigorous mathematical definitions for those objects, something that needs
preliminary a clear mathematical distinction between the concepts of observers,
reference frames, naturally adapted coordinate functions to a given reference
frame and which properties may characterize an inertial reference frame (if
any) in the Lorentzian and Riemann-Cartan structures. We hope to have clarified
some eventual obscure issues associated to the concept of LIRF appearing in the
literature, in particular the relationship between LIRFs in Lorentzian and
Riemann-Cartan spacetimes and Einstein's most happy though, i.e., the
equivalence principle.Comment: In this version a new reference has been added, some misprints and
typos have been corrected and some few sentences in two remarks and in the
conclusions have been changed for better intelligibilit
Lorentz-violating nonminimal coupling contributions in mesonic hydrogen atoms and generation of photon higher-order derivative terms
We have studied the contributions of Lorentz-violating CPT-odd and CPT-even
nonminimal couplings to the energy spectrum of the mesonic hydrogen and the
higher-order radiative corrections to the effective action of the photon sector
of a Lorentz-violating version of the scalar electrodynamics. By considering
the complex scalar field describes charged mesons (pion or kaon), the
non-relativistic limit of the model allows to attain upper-bounds by analyzing
its contribution to the mesonic hydrogen energy. By using the experimental data
for the strong correction shift and the pure QED transitions , the best upper-bound for the CPT-odd coupling is
and for the CPT-even one is
. Besides, the CPT-odd radiative correction to the
photon action is a dimension-5 operator which looks like a higher-order
Carroll-Field-Jackiw term. The CPT-even radiative contribution to the photon
effective action is a dimension-6 operator which would be a higher-order
derivative version of the minimal CPT-even term of the standard model
extension
The runaway black hole GRO J1655-40
We have used the Hubble Space Telescope to measure the motion in the sky and
compute the galactocentric orbit of the black hole X-ray binary GRO J1655-40.
The system moves with a runaway space velocity of km s in a
highly eccentric () orbit. The black hole was formed in the
disk at a distance greater than 3 kpc from the Galactic centre and must have
been shot to such an eccentric orbit by the explosion of the progenitor star.
The runaway linear momentum and kinetic energy of this black hole binary are
comparable to those of solitary neutron stars and millisecond pulsars. GRO
J1655-40 is the first black hole for which there is evidence for a runaway
motion imparted by a natal kick in a supernova explosion.Comment: Published in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 5 pages, 2 color figures.
Color figure and animation can be found at
http://www.iafe.uba.ar/astronomia/mirabel/mirabel.html or
ftp://ftp.cea.fr/incoming/y2k01/mirabe
Using presence-absence data to establish reserve selection procedures that are robust to temporal species turnover
Previous studies suggest that a network of nature reserves with maximum efficiency (obtained by selecting the minimum area such that each species is represented once) is likely to be insufficient to maintain species in the network over time. Here, we test the performance of three selection strategies which require presence-absence data, two of them previously proposed (multiple representations and selecting an increasing percentage of each species' range) and a novel one based on selecting the site where each species has exhibited a higher permanence rate in the past. Multiple representations appear to be a safer strategy than selecting a percentage of range because the former gives priority to rarer species while the latter favours the most widespread.
The most effective strategy was the one based on the permanence rate, indicating that the robustness of reserve networks can be improved by adopting reserve selection procedures that integrate information about the relative value of sites. This strategy was also very efficient, suggesting that the investment made in the monitoring schemes may be compensated for by a lower cost in reserve acquisition
Analyzing Trails in Complex Networks
Even more interesting than the intricate organization of complex networks are
the dynamical behavior of systems which such structures underly. Among the many
types of dynamics, one particularly interesting category involves the evolution
of trails left by moving agents progressing through random walks and dilating
processes in a complex network. The emergence of trails is present in many
dynamical process, such as pedestrian traffic, information flow and metabolic
pathways. Important problems related with trails include the reconstruction of
the trail and the identification of its source, when complete knowledge of the
trail is missing. In addition, the following of trails in multi-agent systems
represent a particularly interesting situation related to pedestrian dynamics
and swarming intelligence. The present work addresses these three issues while
taking into account permanent and transient marks left in the visited nodes.
Different topologies are considered for trail reconstruction and trail source
identification, including four complex networks models and four real networks,
namely the Internet, the US airlines network, an email network and the
scientific collaboration network of complex network researchers. Our results
show that the topology of the network influence in trail reconstruction, source
identification and agent dynamics.Comment: 10 pages, 16 figures. A working manuscript, comments and criticisms
welcome
The role of electron-electron interactions in two-dimensional Dirac fermions
The role of electron-electron interactions on two-dimensional Dirac fermions
remains enigmatic. Using a combination of nonperturbative numerical and
analytical techniques that incorporate both the contact and long-range parts of
the Coulomb interaction, we identify the two previously discussed regimes: a
Gross-Neveu transition to a strongly correlated Mott insulator, and a
semi-metallic state with a logarithmically diverging Fermi velocity accurately
described by the random phase approximation. Most interestingly, experimental
realizations of Dirac fermions span the crossover between these two regimes
providing the physical mechanism that masks this velocity divergence. We
explain several long-standing mysteries including why the observed Fermi
velocity in graphene is consistently about 20 percent larger than the best
values calculated using ab initio and why graphene on different substrates show
different behavior.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
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