169 research outputs found
Cosmic censorship in overcharging a Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole via charged particle absorption
There is a claim that a static charged black hole (Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m
black hole) can be overcharged by absorbing a charged test particle. If it is
true, it might give a counter example to the weak cosmic censorship conjecture,
which states that spacetime singularities are never observed by a distant
observer. However, so far the proposed process has only been analyzed within a
test particle approximation. Here we claim that the back reaction effects of a
charged particle cannot be neglected when judging whether the suggested process
is really a counter example to the cosmic censorship conjecture or not.
Furthermore, we argue that all the back reaction effects can be properly taken
into account when we consider the trajectory of a particle on the border
between the plunge and bounce orbits. In such marginal cases we find that the
Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole can never be overcharged via the absorption
of a charged particle. Since all the plunge orbits are expected to have a
higher energy than the marginal orbit, we conclude that there is no supporting
evidence that indicates the violation of the cosmic censorship in the proposed
overcharging process.Comment: 18 pages, revtex4, minor revision and reference added, version to
appear in PR
Research Update on Extreme-Mass-Ratio Inspirals
The inspirals of stellar-mass mass compact objects into massive black holes
in the centres of galaxies are one of the most important sources of
gravitational radiation for space-based detectors like LISA or eLISA. These
extreme-mass-ratio inspirals (EMRIs) will enable an ambitious research program
with implications for astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics. This
article is a summary of the talks delivered at the plenary session on EMRIs at
the 10th International LISA Symposium. It contains research updates on the
following topics: astrophysics of EMRIs; EMRI science potential; and EMRI
modeling.Comment: 17 pages, no figures. Proceedings of the LISA Symposium X, to be
published at the Journal of Physic
Test of the weak cosmic censorship conjecture with a charged scalar field and dyonic Kerr-Newman black holes
A thought experiment considered recently in the literature, in which it is
investigated whether a dyonic Kerr-Newman black hole can be destroyed by
overcharging or overspinning it past extremality by a massive complex scalar
test field, is revisited. Another derivation of the result that this is not
possible, i.e. the weak cosmic censorship is not violated in this thought
experiment, is given. The derivation is based on conservation laws, on a null
energy condition, and on specific properties of the metric and the
electromagnetic field of dyonic Kerr-Newman black holes. The metric is kept
fixed, whereas the dynamics of the electromagnetic field is taken into account.
A detailed knowledge of the solutions of the equations of motion is not needed.
The approximation in which the electromagnetic field is fixed is also
considered, and a derivation for this case is also given. In addition, an older
version of the thought experiment, in which a pointlike test particle is used,
is revisited. The same result, namely the non-violation of the cosmic
censorship, is rederived in a way which is simpler than in earlier works.Comment: 18 pages, LaTe
Is age an independent determinant of mortality in cardiac surgery as suggested by the EuroSCORE?
BACKGROUND: The proportion of older patients in cardiac surgery is continuously increasing. 37% of patients undergoing heart surgery in Germany in the year 2000 were 70 years of age and older. We have studied the role of age as a determinant of mortality in cardiac surgery in our institutional patient population. METHODS: We have calculated the EuroSCORE and the corresponding age-adjusted EuroSCORE in 8769 patients who underwent heart surgery between January 1996 and January 2002 and collected the information on the occurrence of postoperative complications and 30-days mortality. RESULTS: The multimorbidity increased with ascending age. Both the EuroSCORE and the age-adjusted EuroSCORE values increased significantly with age in the whole group of patients as well as in the group of patients who were alive 30 days after heart surgery. The incidence of postoperative complications and 30-days mortality increased significantly with age. In patients who died within 30 days after surgery, the EuroSCORE increased significantly with age, whereas the age-adjusted EuroSCORE did not. The occurrence of diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension and atrial fibrillation, i.e., the risk factors not considered by the EuroSCORE, exhibited a significant age dependence in our patients. The univariate analysis identified the significant dependence of 30-days mortality on diabetes and atrial fibrillation. The stepwise logistic regression analysis showed the dependence of mortality on diabetes. CONCLUSIONS: On the background of the well-known age-dependent structural and functional changes of different body organs, our data show that age is a significant risk indicator in cardiac surgery, strongly correlating with morbidity and mortality. Consequently, special preventive and therapeutic measures are required in clinical environment in the case of elderly patients undergoing cardiac surgery
Self-force: Computational Strategies
Building on substantial foundational progress in understanding the effect of
a small body's self-field on its own motion, the past 15 years has seen the
emergence of several strategies for explicitly computing self-field corrections
to the equations of motion of a small, point-like charge. These approaches
broadly fall into three categories: (i) mode-sum regularization, (ii) effective
source approaches and (iii) worldline convolution methods. This paper reviews
the various approaches and gives details of how each one is implemented in
practice, highlighting some of the key features in each case.Comment: Synchronized with final published version. Review to appear in
"Equations of Motion in Relativistic Gravity", published as part of the
Springer "Fundamental Theories of Physics" series. D. Puetzfeld et al.
(eds.), Equations of Motion in Relativistic Gravity, Fundamental Theories of
Physics 179, Springer, 201
Carbon Monoxide Induced Erythroid Differentiation of K562 Cells Mimics the Central Macrophage Milieu in Erythroblastic Islands
Growing evidence supports the role of erythroblastic islands (EI) as microenvironmental niches within bone marrow (BM), where cell-cell attachments are suggested as crucial for erythroid maturation. The inducible form of the enzyme heme oxygenase, HO-1, which conducts heme degradation, is absent in erythroblasts where hemoglobin (Hb) is synthesized. Yet, the central macrophage, which retains high HO-1 activity, might be suitable to take over degradation of extra, harmful, Hb heme. Of these enzymatic products, only the hydrophobic gas molecule - CO can transfer from the macrophage to surrounding erythroblasts directly via their tightly attached membranes in the terminal differentiation stage
Incomplete Inhibition of Sphingosine 1-Phosphate Lyase Modulates Immune System Function yet Prevents Early Lethality and Non-Lymphoid Lesions
BACKGROUND: S1PL is an aldehyde-lyase that irreversibly cleaves sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) in the terminal step of sphingolipid catabolism. Because S1P modulates a wide range of physiological processes, its concentration must be tightly regulated within both intracellular and extracellular environments. METHODOLOGY: In order to better understand the function of S1PL in this regulatory pathway, we assessed the in vivo effects of different levels of S1PL activity using knockout (KO) and humanized mouse models. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our analysis showed that all S1PL-deficient genetic models in this study displayed lymphopenia, with sequestration of mature T cells in the thymus and lymph nodes. In addition to the lymphoid phenotypes, S1PL KO mice (S1PL(-/-)) also developed myeloid cell hyperplasia and significant lesions in the lung, heart, urinary tract, and bone, and had a markedly reduced life span. The humanized knock-in mice harboring one allele (S1PL(H/-)) or two alleles (S1PL(H/H)) of human S1PL expressed less than 10 and 20% of normal S1PL activity, respectively. This partial restoration of S1PL activity was sufficient to fully protect both humanized mouse lines from the lethal non-lymphoid lesions that developed in S1PL(-/-) mice, but failed to restore normal T-cell development and trafficking. Detailed analysis of T-cell compartments indicated that complete absence of S1PL affected both maturation/development and egress of mature T cells from the thymus, whereas low level S1PL activity affected T-cell egress more than differentiation. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings demonstrate that lymphocyte trafficking is particularly sensitive to variations in S1PL activity and suggest that there is a window in which partial inhibition of S1PL could produce therapeutic levels of immunosuppression without causing clinically significant S1P-related lesions in non-lymphoid target organs
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