18,152 research outputs found

    Microstates of a Neutral Black Hole in M Theory

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    We consider vacuum solutions in M theory of the form of a five-dimensional Kaluza-Klein black hole cross T^6. In a certain limit, these include the five-dimensional neutral rotating black hole (cross T^6). From a IIA standpoint, these solutions carry D0 and D6 charges. We show that there is a weakly coupled D-brane description which precisely reproduces the Hawking-Bekenstein entropy in the extremal limit, even though supersymmetry is completely broken.Comment: 11 pages. v2: microstate counting extended to generic angular moment

    Critical exponents for the long-range Ising chain using a transfer matrix approach

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    The critical behavior of the Ising chain with long-range ferromagnetic interactions decaying with distance rαr^\alpha, 1<α<21<\alpha<2, is investigated using a numerically efficient transfer matrix (TM) method. Finite size approximations to the infinite chain are considered, in which both the number of spins and the number of interaction constants can be independently increased. Systems with interactions between spins up to 18 sites apart and up to 2500 spins in the chain are considered. We obtain data for the critical exponents ν\nu associated with the correlation length based on the Finite Range Scaling (FRS) hypothesis. FRS expressions require the evaluation of derivatives of the thermodynamical properties, which are obtained with the help of analytical recurrence expressions obtained within the TM framework. The Van den Broeck extrapolation procedure is applied in order to estimate the convergence of the exponents. The TM procedure reduces the dimension of the matrices and circumvents several numerical matrix operations.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Conference NEXT Sigma Ph

    Picosecond time scale imaging of mechanical contacts

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    By means of an ultrafast opto-acoustic technique we study the nanoindentation of thin chromium films on sapphire substrates using a ceramic ball bearing. Acoustic pulses at 40 GHz returning from the film–indenter interface allow the film indentation profiles to be probed to sub-nanometer resolution over contact areas 25 lm in radius. The deformation of the films during loading is hereby revealed. Furthermore, thermal wave imaging of the contact at megahertz frequencies is simultaneously achieved

    Exact Description of Black Holes on Branes II: Comparison with BTZ Black Holes and Black Strings

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    We extend our recent discussion of four-dimensional black holes bound to a two-brane to include a negative cosmological constant on the brane. We find that for large masses, the solutions are precisely BTZ black holes on the brane, and BTZ `black strings' in the bulk. For smaller masses, there are localized black holes which look like BTZ with corrections that fall off exponentially. We compute when the maximum entropy configuration changes from the black string to the black hole. We also present exact solutions describing rotating black holes on two-branes which are either asymptotically flat or asymptotically AdS3AdS_3. The mass and angular momentum on the brane agree with that in the bulk.Comment: 30 page

    Magnetic Sensors Based on Long Josephson Tunnel Junctions - An Alternative to SQUIDs

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    The properties of Josephson devices are strongly affected by geometrical effects. A loop-shaped superconducting electrode tightly couples a long Josephson tunnel junction with the surrounding electromagnetic field. Due to the fluxoid conservation, any change of the magnetic flux linked to the loop results in a variation of the shielding current circulating around the loop, which, in turn, affects the critical current of the Josephson junction. This method allows the realization of a novel family of robust superconducting devices (not based on the quantum interference) which can function as a general-purpose magnetic sensors. The best performance is accomplished without compromising the noise performance by employing an in-line-type junction few times longer than its Josephson penetration length. The linear (rather than periodic) response to magnetic flux changes over a wide range is just one of its several advantages compared to the most sensitive magnetic detectors currently available, namely the Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices (SQUID). We will also comment on the drawbacks of the proposed system and speculate on its noise properties.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure

    Horizon of quantum black holes in various dimensions

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    We adapt the horizon wave-function formalism to describe massive static spherically symmetric sources in a general (1+D)(1+D)-dimensional space-time, for D>3D>3 and including the D=1D=1 case. We find that the probability PBHP_{\rm BH} that such objects are (quantum) black holes behaves similarly to the probability in the (3+1)(3+1) framework for D>3D> 3. In fact, for D≥3D\ge 3, the probability increases towards unity as the mass grows above the relevant DD-dimensional Planck scale mDm_D. At fixed mass, however, PBHP_{\rm BH} decreases with increasing DD, so that a particle with mass m≃mDm\simeq m_D has just about 10%10\% probability to be a black hole in D=5D=5, and smaller for larger DD. This result has a potentially strong impact on estimates of black hole production in colliders. In contrast, for D=1D=1, we find the probability is comparably larger for smaller masses, but PBH<0.5P_{\rm BH} < 0.5, suggesting that such lower dimensional black holes are purely quantum and not classical objects. This result is consistent with recent observations that sub-Planckian black holes are governed by an effective two-dimensional gravitation theory. Lastly, we derive Generalised Uncertainty Principle relations for the black holes under consideration, and find a minimum length corresponding to a characteristic energy scale of the order of the fundamental gravitational mass mDm_D in D>3D>3. For D=1D=1 we instead find the uncertainty due to the horizon fluctuations has the same form as the usual Heisenberg contribution, and therefore no fundamental scale exists.Comment: Latex, 16 pages, 8 figures. Final version to appear in PL

    An Unusual Case of Tertiary Syphilis Behaving Like Tongue Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

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    Syphilis may present with a myriad of oral manifestations in the primary, secondary, and tertiary stages, and may be confused with malignancy. Despite a rise in the incidence of syphilis, tertiary syphilis is exceedingly rare. Tertiary syphilis gummas usually affect the hard palate, while tongue involvement is very rare. A 55-year-old male with extensive smoking and alcohol use was referred for malignancy evaluation with an ulcerative mass creating a tongue cleft, and a positron emission tomography scan suggestive for malignancy. Biopsy results demonstrated no carcinoma but histology demonstrated granulomatous inflammation. Further laboratory results demonstrated elevated rapid plasma reagin titers with Treponema pallidum immunoglobulin G antibodies present. The patient was diagnosed with tertiary syphilis, received appropriate antibiotic therapy, and had healing of the tongue with a persistent cleft. Syphilis may mimic many disease processes. As such, it is important to include this disease in the differential of an unusual tongue lesion. An oral lesion may be the first sign of infection
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