276 research outputs found
Chronology protection in stationary three-dimensional spacetimes
We study chronology protection in stationary, rotationally symmetric
spacetimes in 2+1 dimensional gravity, focusing especially on the case of
negative cosmological constant. We show that in such spacetimes closed timelike
curves must either exist all the way to the boundary or, alternatively, the
matter stress tensor must violate the null energy condition in the bulk. We
also show that the matter in the closed timelike curve region gives a negative
contribution to the conformal weight from the point of view of the dual
conformal field theory. We illustrate these properties in a class of examples
involving rotating dust in anti-de Sitter space, and comment on the use of the
AdS/CFT correspondence to study chronology protection.Comment: 20 pages. V2: minor corrections, Outlook expanded, references added,
published versio
Warm tachyonic inflation in warped background
We analyze warm tachyonic inflation, proposed in the literature, but from the
viewpoint of four dimensional effective action for tachyon field on a non-BPS
D3-brane. We find that consistency with observational data on density
perturbation and validity of effective action requires warped compactification.
The number of background branes which source the flux is found to be of the
order of 10 in contrast to the order of in the standard cold
inflationary scenario.Comment: 9 pages, RevTe
What is needed of a tachyon if it is to be the dark energy?
We study a dark energy scenario in the presence of a tachyon field
with potential and a barotropic perfect fluid. The cosmological
dynamics crucially depends on the asymptotic behavior of the quantity
. If is a constant, which corresponds to
an inverse square potential , there exists one
stable critical point that gives an acceleration of the universe at late times.
When asymptotically, we can have a viable dark energy scenario
in which the system approaches an ``instantaneous'' critical point that
dynamically changes with . If approaches infinity
asymptotically, the universe does not exhibit an acceleration at late times. In
this case, however, we find an interesting possibility that a transient
acceleration occurs in a regime where is smaller than of order
unity.Comment: 11 pages and 3 figures, minor clarifications added; final version to
appear in PR
Vanishing Cosmological Constant in Modified Gauss-Bonnet Gravity with Conformal Anomaly
We consider dark energy cosmology in a de Sitter universe filled with quantum
conformal matter. Our model represents a Gauss-Bonnet model of gravity with
contributions from quantum effects. To the General Relativity action an
arbitrary function of the GB invariant, f(G), is added, and taking into account
quantum effects from matter the cosmological constant is studied. For the
considered model the conditions for a vanishing cosmological constant are
considered. Creation of a de Sitter universe by quantum effects in a GB
modified gravity is discussed.Comment: 8 pages latex, 1 figure. To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Simple holographic duals to boundary CFTs
By relaxing the regularity conditions imposed in arXiv:1107.1722 on half-BPS
solutions to six-dimensional Type~4b supergravity, we enlarge the space of
solutions to include two new half-BPS configurations, which we refer to as the
\kap\ and the \funnel. We give evidence that the \kap\ and \funnel\ can be
interpreted as fully back-reacted brane solutions with respectively and
world volumes. \kap\ and \funnel\ solutions with a single
asymptotic region are constructed analytically. We argue
that \kap\ solutions provide simple examples of holographic duals to boundary
CFTs in two dimensions and present calculations of their holographic boundary
entropy to support the BCFT dual picture.Comment: 37 pages, pdflatex, 5 figure
Quantizing higher-spin gravity in free-field variables
We study the formulation of massless higher-spin gravity on AdS in a
gauge in which the fundamental variables satisfy free field Poisson brackets.
This gauge choice leaves a small portion of the gauge freedom unfixed, which
should be further quotiented out. We show that doing so leads to a bulk version
of the Coulomb gas formalism for CFT's: the generators of the residual
gauge symmetries are the classical limits of screening charges, while the
gauge-invariant observables are classical charges. Quantization in these
variables can be carried out using standard techniques and makes manifest a
remnant of the triality symmetry of . This symmetry can be
used to argue that the theory should be supplemented with additional matter
content which is precisely that of the Prokushkin-Vasiliev theory. As a further
application, we use our formulation to quantize a class of conical surplus
solutions and confirm the conjecture that these are dual to specific degenerate
primaries, to all orders in the large central charge expansion.Comment: 31 pages + appendices. V2: typos corrected, reference adde
Open String Attractors
We present a simple example of a supersymmetric attractor mechanism in the
purely open string context of D-branes embedded in curved space-time. Our
example involves a class of D3-branes embedded in the 2-charge D1-D5 background
of type IIB whose worldvolume contains a 2-sphere. Turning on worldvolume
fluxes, these branes carry induced (p,q) string charges. Supersymmetric
configurations display a flow of the open string moduli towards an attractor
solution independent of their asymptotics. The equations governing this
mechanism closely resemble the attractor flow equations for supersymmetric
black holes in closed string theory. The BPS equations take the form of a
gradient flow and describe worldvolume solitons interpolating between an AdS_2
geometry where the two-sphere has collapsed, and an attractor solution with
AdS_2 x S^2 geometry. In these limiting solutions, the preserved supersymmetry
is enhanced from 4 to 8 supercharges. We also discuss the interpretation of our
solutions as intersecting brane configurations placed in the D1-D5 background,
as well as the S-duality transformation to the F1-NS5 background.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures. v2: small corrections, figure and references
adde
String theory duals of Lifshitz-Chern-Simons gauge theories
We propose candidate gravity duals for a class of non-Abelian z=2 Lifshitz
Chern-Simons (LCS) gauge theories studied by Mulligan, Kachru and Nayak. These
are nonrelativistic gauge theories in 2+1 dimensions in which parity and
time-reversal symmetries are explicitly broken by the presence of a
Chern-Simons term. We show that these field theories can be realized as
deformations of DLCQ N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. Using the holographic
dictionary, we identify the bulk fields that are dual to these deformations.
The geometries describing the groundstates of the non-Abelian LCS gauge
theories realized here exhibit a mass gap.Comment: 25+14 pages, 3 figures; v2: significant corrections regarding IR
geometry, resulting in new section 5; journal versio
Black Hole Meiosis
The enumeration of BPS bound states in string theory needs refinement.
Studying partition functions of particles made from D-branes wrapped on
algebraic Calabi-Yau 3-folds, and classifying states using split attractor flow
trees, we extend the method for computing a refined BPS index, arXiv:0810.4301.
For certain D-particles, a finite number of microstates, namely polar states,
exclusively realized as bound states, determine an entire partition function
(elliptic genus). This underlines their crucial importance: one might call them
the `chromosomes' of a D-particle or a black hole. As polar states also can be
affected by our refinement, previous predictions on elliptic genera are
modified. This can be metaphorically interpreted as `crossing-over in the
meiosis of a D-particle'. Our results improve on hep-th/0702012, provide
non-trivial evidence for a strong split attractor flow tree conjecture, and
thus suggest that we indeed exhaust the BPS spectrum. In the D-brane
description of a bound state, the necessity for refinement results from the
fact that tachyonic strings split up constituent states into `generic' and
`special' states. These are enumerated separately by topological invariants,
which turn out to be partitions of Donaldson-Thomas invariants. As modular
predictions provide a check on many of our results, we have compelling evidence
that our computations are correct.Comment: 46 pages, 8 figures. v2: minor changes. v3: minor changes and
reference adde
- …