3,035 research outputs found
N=4 Topological Amplitudes and Black Hole Entropy
We study the effects of N=4 topological string amplitudes on the entropy of
black holes. We analyse the leading contribution associated to six-derivative
terms and find one particular operator which can correct the entropy of N=4
black holes. This operator is BPS-like and appears in the effective action of
type II string theory on K3 x T^2 or equivalently its heterotic dual on T^6. In
both descriptions the leading contribution arises at one-loop, which we
calculate explicitly on the heterotic side. We then consider whether this term
has any consequences for the entropy of (large) N=4 black holes and find that
it makes indeed a contribution at subleading order. Repeating the computation
for small black holes with vanishing horizon area at the classical level, we
prove that this coupling lifts certain flat directions in the entropy function
thereby being responsible for the attractor equations of some moduli fields.Comment: 33 pages, references added, section 3.3 adde
Geometry of 4d Simplicial Quantum Gravity with a U(1) Gauge Field
The geometry of 4D simplicial quantum gravity with a U(1) gauge field is
studied numerically. The phase diagram shows a continuous transition when
gravity is coupled with a U(1) gauge field. At the critical point measurements
of the curvature distribution of S^4 space shows an inflated geometry with
homogeneous and symmetric nature. Also, by choosing a 4-simplex and fixing the
scalar curvature geometry of the space is measured.Comment: 3 pages, 2 eps figure. Talked at Lattice 2000 (Gravity
Conformal dynamics of quantum gravity with torsion
The trace anomaly induced dynamics of the conformal factor is investigated in
four-dimensional quantum gravity with torsion. The constraints for the coupling
constants of torsion matter interaction are obtained in the infrared stable
fixed point of the effective scalar theory.Comment: 10 pages, CPTH-A213.1292 -- HUPD-921
Soft Masses in Theories with Supersymmetry Breaking by TeV-Compactification
We study the sparticle spectroscopy and electroweak breaking of theories
where supersymmetry is broken by compactification (Scherk-Schwarz mechanism) at
a TeV. The evolution of the soft terms above the compactification scale and the
resulting sparticle spectrum are very different from those of the usual MSSM
and gauge mediated theories. This is traced to the softness of the
Scherk-Schwarz mechanism which leads to scalar sparticle masses that are only
logarithmically sensitive to the cutoff starting at two loops. As a result,
squarks and sleptons are naturally an order of magnitude lighter than gauginos.
In addition, the mechanism is very predictive and the sparticle spectrum
depends on just two new parameters. A significant advantage of this mechanism
relative to gauge mediation is that a Higgsino mass is
automatically generated when supersymmetry is broken. Our analysis applies
equally well to theories where the cutoff is near a TeV or or some
intermediate scale. We also use these observations to show how we may obtain
compactification radii which are hierarchically larger than the fundamental
cutoff scale.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figure, Late
News about TeV-scale Black Holes
Collider produced black holes are the most exciting prediction from models
with large extra dimensions. These black holes exist in an extreme region, in
which gravity meets quantum field theory, particle physics, and thermodynamics.
An investigation of the formation and decay processes can therefore provide us
with important insights about the underlying theory and open a window to the
understanding of Physics at the Planck scale. The production and the
evaporation of TeV-scale black holes yields distinct signatures that have been
examined closely during the last years, with analytical approaches as well as
by use of numerical simulations. I present new results for the LHC, which take
into account that, instead of a final decay, a black hole remnant can be left.
This is a summary of the talk given at the Quark Matter 2005, Budapest,
Hungary, Aug. 2005.Comment: Talk given at the Quark Matter 2005, Budapest, Hungary, Aug. 200
A closer look at string resonances in dijet events at the LHC
The first string excited state can be observed as a resonance in dijet
invariant mass distributions at the LHC, if the scenario of low-scale string
with large extra dimensions is realized. A distinguished property of the dijet
resonance by string excited states from that the other "new physics" is that
many almost degenerate states with various spin compose a single resonance
structure. It is examined that how we can obtain evidences of low-scale string
models through the analysis of angular distributions of dijet events at the
LHC. Some string resonance states of color singlet can obtain large mass shifts
through the open string one-loop effect, or through the mixing with closed
string states, and the shape of resonance structure can be distorted. Although
the distortion is not very large (10% for the mass squared), it might be able
to observe the effect at the LHC, if gluon jets and quark jets could be
distinguished in a certain level of efficiency.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Brane singularities and their avoidance
The singularity structure and the corresponding asymptotic behavior of a
3-brane coupled to a scalar field or to a perfect fluid in a five-dimensional
bulk is analyzed in full generality using the method of asymptotic splittings.
In the case of the scalar field, it is shown that the collapse singularity at a
finite distance from the brane can be avoided only at the expense of making the
brane world-volume positively or negatively curved. In the case where the bulk
field content is parametrized by an analogue of perfect fluid with an arbitrary
equation of state P=\gamma\rho between the `pressure' P and the `density' \rho,
our results depend crucially on the constant fluid parameter \gamma: (i) For
\gamma>-1/2, the flat brane solution suffers from a collapse singularity at
finite distance, that disappears in the curved case. (ii) For \gamma<-1, the
singularity cannot be avoided and it becomes of the big rip type for a flat
brane. (iii) For -1<\gamma< or = -1/2, the surprising result is found that
while the curved brane solution is singular, the flat brane is not, opening the
possibility for a revival of the self-tuning proposal.Comment: 37 pages, latex, merged version of arXiv:1005.3221 and
arXiv:1004.3379, to appear in Class.Quant.Gra
Reconstructing the conformal mode in simplicial gravity
We verify that summing 2D DT geometries correctly reproduces the Polyakov
action for the conformal mode, including all ghost contributions, at large
volumes. The Gaussian action is reproduced even for central charges greater
than one lending strong support to the hypothesis that the space of all
possible dyamical triangulations approximates well the space of physically
distinct metrics independent of the precise nature of the matter coupling.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, contribution to Lattice 9
Constraints From Gauge Coupling Unification On The Scale Of Supersymmetry Breaking
We reanalyze precision LEP data and coupling constant unification in the
minimal supersymmetric model including the evolution of the gaugino
masses. We derive general bounds on the primordial gaugino
supersymmetry-breaking mass-scale in terms of the various input
parameters. The model cannot accommodate m_{1/2}<1\TeV for values of \as <
0.115, even for extreme values of the other inputs. We emphasize
the sensitivity of this type of calculations to the various input parameters.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure not included, ACT-10/9
Physical States of the Quantum Conformal Factor
The conformal factor of the spacetime metric becomes dynamical due to the
trace anomaly of matter fields. Its dynamics is described by an effective
action which we quantize by canonical methods on the Einstein universe . We find an infinite tower of discrete states which satisfy the
constraints of quantum diffeomorphism invariance. These physical states are in
one-to-one correspondence with operators constructed by integrating integer
powers of the Ricci scalar.Comment: PlainTeX File, 34 page
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