1,660 research outputs found
On the interaction between two Kerr black holes
The double-Kerr solution is generated using both a Backlund transformation
and the Belinskii-Zakharov inverse-scattering technique. We build a dictionary
between the parametrisations naturally obtained in the two methods and show
their equivalence. We then focus on the asymptotically flat double-Kerr system
obeying the axis condition which is Z_2^\phi invariant; for this system there
is an exact formula for the force between the two black holes, in terms of
their physical quantities and the coordinate distance. We then show that 1) the
angular velocity of the two black holes decreases from the usual Kerr value at
infinite distance to zero in the touching limit; 2) the extremal limit of the
two black holes is given by |J|=cM^2, where c depends on the distance and
varies from one to infinity as the distance decreases; 3) for sufficiently
large angular momentum the temperature of the black holes attains a maximum at
a certain finite coordinate distance. All of these results are interpreted in
terms of the dragging effects of the system.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures. v2: changed statement about thermodynamical
equilibrium in section 3; minor changes; added references. v3: added
references to previous relevant work; removed one equation (see note added);
other minor corrections; final version to be published in JHE
Thermodynamical description of stationary, asymptotically flat solutions with conical singularities
We examine the thermodynamical properties of a number of asymptotically flat,
stationary (but not static) solutions having conical singularities, with both
connected and non-connected event horizons, using the thermodynamical
description recently proposed in arXiv:0912.3386 [gr-qc]. The examples
considered are the double-Kerr solution, the black ring rotating in either S^2
or S^1 and the black Saturn, where the balance condition is not imposed for the
latter two solutions. We show that not only the Bekenstein-Hawking area law is
recovered from the thermodynamical description but also the thermodynamical
angular momentum is the ADM angular momentum. We also analyse the
thermodynamical stability and show that, for all these solutions, either the
isothermal moment of inertia or the specific heat at constant angular momentum
is negative, at any point in parameter space. Therefore, all these solutions
are thermodynamically unstable in the grand canonical ensemble.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figure
On the backreaction of frame dragging
The backreaction on black holes due to dragging heavy, rather than test,
objects is discussed. As a case study, a regular black Saturn system where the
central black hole has vanishing intrinsic angular momentum, J^{BH}=0, is
considered. It is shown that there is a correlation between the sign of two
response functions. One is interpreted as a moment of inertia of the black ring
in the black Saturn system. The other measures the variation of the black ring
horizon angular velocity with the central black hole mass, for fixed ring mass
and angular momentum. The two different phases defined by these response
functions collapse, for small central black hole mass, to the thin and fat ring
phases. In the fat phase, the zero area limit of the black Saturn ring has
reduced spin j^2>1, which is related to the behaviour of the ring angular
velocity. Using the `gravitomagnetic clock effect', for which a universality
property is exhibited, it is shown that frame dragging measured by an
asymptotic observer decreases, in both phases, when the central black hole mass
increases, for fixed ring mass and angular momentum. A close parallelism
between the results for the fat phase and those obtained recently for the
double Kerr solution is drawn, considering also a regular black Saturn system
with J^{BH}\neq 0.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figure
A Double Myers-Perry Black Hole in Five Dimensions
Using the inverse scattering method we construct a six-parameter family of
exact, stationary, asymptotically flat solutions of the 4+1 dimensional vacuum
Einstein equations, with U(1)^2 rotational symmetry. It describes the
superposition of two Myers-Perry black holes, each with a single angular
momentum parameter, both in the same plane. The black holes live in a
background geometry which is the Euclidean C-metric with an extra flat time
direction. This background possesses conical singularities in two adjacent
compact regions, each corresponding to a set of fixed points of one of the U(1)
actions in the Cartan sub-algebra of SO(4). We discuss several aspects of the
black holes geometry, including the conical singularities arising from force
imbalance, and the torsion singularity arising from torque imbalance. The
double Myers-Perry solution presented herein is considerably simpler than the
four dimensional double Kerr solution and might be of interest in studying
spin-spin interactions in five dimensional general relativity.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, LaTeX. v2: minor changes, references added;
version published in JHE
dMyc-dependent upregulation of CD98 amino acid transporters is required for Drosophila brain tumor growth
Funding Information: We would like to thank Tiago Baptista and Hugo Silva for experimental help. We thank Florence Janody and Rita Teodoro for critical reading of the manuscript. We thank Juergen Knoblich for the Miranda antibody. We thank the cytometry and fly facilities at NOVA Medical School for technical support and CONGENTO: consortium for genetically tractable organisms (LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-022170); Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center (NIH P40OD018537) and Vienna Drosophila Resource Center (VDRC) [52 ], for the stocks used in this study; the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, created by the NICHD of the NIH and maintained at The University of Iowa, Department of Biology, Iowa City, IA 52242. Funding Information: Open access funding provided by FCT|FCCN (b-on). This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (H2020-ERC-2017-STG-GA 759853-StemCellHabitat); by Wellcome Trust and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI-208581/Z/17/Z-Metabolic Reg SC fate); EMBO Installation grant (H2020-EMBO-3311/2017/G2017) and by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (IF/01265/2014/CP1252/CT0004, EXPL/BIA-BID/1394/2021 and 2020.05639.BD to A.R.R). This work was supported by iNOVA4Health—UIDB/04462/2020 and UIDP/04462/2020, and by the Associated Laboratory LS4FUTURE (LA/P/0087/2020), two programs financially supported by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia/Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Ensino Superior. Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).Tumor cells have an increased demand for nutrients to sustain their growth, but how these increased metabolic needs are ensured or how this influences tumor formation and progression remains unclear. To unravel tumor metabolic dependencies, particularly from extracellular metabolites, we have analyzed the role of plasma membrane metabolic transporters in Drosophila brain tumors. Using a well-established neural stem cell-derived tumor model, caused by brat knockdown, we have found that 13 plasma membrane metabolic transporters, including amino acid, carbohydrate and monocarboxylate transporters, are upregulated in tumors and are required for tumor growth. We identified CD98hc and several of the light chains with which it can form heterodimeric amino acid transporters, as crucial players in brat RNAi (bratIR) tumor progression. Knockdown of these components of CD98 heterodimers caused a dramatic reduction in tumor growth. Our data also reveal that the oncogene dMyc is required and sufficient for the upregulation of CD98 transporter subunits in these tumors. Furthermore, tumor-upregulated dmyc and CD98 transporters orchestrate the overactivation of the growth-promoting signaling pathway TOR, forming a core growth regulatory network to support brat IR tumor progression. Our findings highlight the important link between oncogenes, metabolism, and signaling pathways in the regulation of tumor growth and allow for a better understanding of the mechanisms necessary for tumor progression.publishersversionpublishe
Does customer-based reputation add to social and mass media reputation in judging social responsibility of banks?
Purpose: Reputation is a critical asset for finance and banking organizations where the mere suspicion of a problem suffices to trigger media turmoil with high risk of market share losses. Investing in media to build reputation has been therefore a priority for banks. However, another source of reputation may stem from direct front-office contact and it is yet unknown to which extent it plays a role when confronted with the widespread social and mass media reach. This study aims at testing the extent of the importance of customer-based reputation, as against media-based reputation, in explaining customer outcomes.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Pediatric Sinogenic Subdural Empyema: Case Report and Operative Technique
Intracranial complications of sinusitis in the pediatric age are rare but potentially life threatening. They usually occur with nonspecific symptoms such as headache, fever, nausea and vomiting rather than a classic neurological presentation, but they may evolve in few hours, leading to significant morbidity with permanent brain damage and sometimes to death. For this reason, early diagnosis and prompt treatment are essential. Our case demonstrates a sinogenic subdural empyema in an immunocompetent young boy who reached our Emergency Department due to a continuous right-sided headache, unresponsive to pain relievers. The clinical history and the diagnostic process are described: at first, laboratory exams, neurologic and otolaryngological assessment were performed, together with a cranial CT scan showing an inflammatory involvement of the right frontal, ethmoidal and maxillary sinuses. Intravenous antibiotic therapy was initiated. After a few hours the patient showed a sudden worsening of his clinical conditions: he was drowsy with left lower extremity hyposthenia and ipsilateral deep tendon reflexes absence. Considering the patient’s aggravated clinical presentation an emergent MRI with contrast enhancement was conducted, showing left midline shift, a widening of the liquor space on the right frontal and parietal convexity and noticeable meningeal enhancement after contrast injection. After a Neurosurgical and ENT evaluation the patient was taken to the operating room for a combined craniotomy and trans-nasal endoscopic drainage of the empyema. We present the surgical procedure with a pictorial step-by-step description. After the surgical procedure the patient’s condition gradually improved. He regained full neurological function, was accompanied by a rehabilitation team on recovering full force on the left extremities. At discharge the patient had no apparent neurological deficits. Subdural empyema is a rare but severe complication of pediatric sinusitis. Early diagnosis with combined medical and surgical therapies play a key role to reduce morbidity and mortality
- …