16,848 research outputs found
The Buyer-Secured Party Conflict and Section 9-307(1) of the UCC: Identifying when a Buyer Qualifies for Protection as a Buyer in Ordinary Course
The body in the library: adventures in realism
This essay looks at two aspects of the virtual ‘material world’ of realist fiction: objects encountered by the protagonist and the latter’s body. Taking from Sartre two angles on the realist pact by which readers agree to lend
their bodies, feelings, and experiences to the otherwise ‘languishing signs’ of the text, it goes on to examine two sets of first-person fictions published between 1902 and 1956 — first, four modernist texts in which banal objects defy and then gratify the protagonist, who ends up ready and almost able to write; and, second, three novels in which the body of the protagonist is indeterminate in its sex, gender, or sexuality. In each of these cases, how do we as readers make texts work for us as ‘an adventure of the body’
A Geometric Model of Arbitrary Spin Massive Particle
A new model of relativistic massive particle with arbitrary spin
(()-particle) is suggested. Configuration space of the model is a product
of Minkowski space and two-dimensional sphere, . The system describes Zitterbewegung at the classical level.
Together with explicitly realized Poincar\'e symmetry, the action functional
turns out to be invariant under two types of gauge transformations having their
origin in the presence of two Abelian first-class constraints in the Hamilton
formalism. These constraints correspond to strong conservation for the
phase-space counterparts of the Casimir operators of the Poincar\'e group.
Canonical quantization of the model leads to equations on the wave functions
which prove to be equivalent to the relativistic wave equations for the massive
spin- field.Comment: 25 pages; v2: eq. (45.b) correcte
Twisted equivariant K-theory, groupoids and proper actions
In this paper we define twisted equivariant K-theory for actions of Lie
groupoids. For a Bredon-compatible Lie groupoid, this defines a periodic
cohomology theory on the category of finite CW-complexes with equivariant
stable projective bundles. A classification of these bundles is shown. We also
obtain a completion theorem and apply these results to proper actions of
groups.Comment: 26 page
Point particle in general background fields vs. free gauge theories of traceless symmetric tensors
Point particle may interact to traceless symmetric tensors of arbitrary rank.
Free gauge theories of traceless symmetric tensors are constructed, that
provides a possibility for a new type of interactions, when particles exchange
by those gauge fields. The gauge theories are parameterized by the particle's
mass m and otherwise are unique for each rank s. For m=0, they are local gauge
models with actions of 2s-th order in derivatives, known in d=4 as "pure spin",
or "conformal higher spin" actions by Fradkin and Tseytlin. For nonzero m, each
rank-s model undergoes a unique nonlocal deformation which entangles fields of
all ranks, starting from s. There exists a nonlocal transform which maps m > 0
theories onto m=0 ones, however, this map degenerates at some m > 0 fields
whose polarizations are determined by zeros of Bessel functions. Conformal
covariance properties of the m=0 models are analyzed, the space of gauge fields
is shown to admit an action of an infinite-dimensional "conformal higher spin"
Lie algebra which leaves gauge transformations intact.Comment: 21 pages, remarks on nonlinear generalization added, a mistake in the
discussion of degenerate solutions correcte
Testing the Hubble Law with the IRAS 1.2 Jy Redshift Survey
We test and reject the claim of Segal et al. (1993) that the correlation of
redshifts and flux densities in a complete sample of IRAS galaxies favors a
quadratic redshift-distance relation over the linear Hubble law. This is done,
in effect, by treating the entire galaxy luminosity function as derived from
the 60 micron 1.2 Jy IRAS redshift survey of Fisher et al. (1995) as a distance
indicator; equivalently, we compare the flux density distribution of galaxies
as a function of redshift with predictions under different redshift-distance
cosmologies, under the assumption of a universal luminosity function. This
method does not assume a uniform distribution of galaxies in space. We find
that this test has rather weak discriminatory power, as argued by Petrosian
(1993), and the differences between models are not as stark as one might expect
a priori. Even so, we find that the Hubble law is indeed more strongly
supported by the analysis than is the quadratic redshift-distance relation. We
identify a bias in the the Segal et al. determination of the luminosity
function, which could lead one to mistakenly favor the quadratic
redshift-distance law. We also present several complementary analyses of the
density field of the sample; the galaxy density field is found to be close to
homogeneous on large scales if the Hubble law is assumed, while this is not the
case with the quadratic redshift-distance relation.Comment: 27 pages Latex (w/figures), ApJ, in press. Uses AAS macros,
postscript also available at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~library/preprints/pop682.ps.g
Looking into DNA breathing dynamics via quantum physics
We study generic aspects of bubble dynamics in DNA under time dependent
perturbations, for example temperature change, by mapping the associated
Fokker-Planck equation to a quantum time-dependent Schroedinger equation with
imaginary time. In the static case we show that the eigenequation is exactly
the same as that of the -deformed nuclear liquid drop model, without the
issue of non-integer angular momentum. A universal breathing dynamics is
demonstrated by using an approximate method in quantum mechanics. The
calculated bubble autocorrelation function qualitatively agrees with
experimental data. Under time dependent modulations, utilizing the adiabatic
approximation, bubble properties reveal memory effects.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
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