647 research outputs found
Gravitation as a Supersymmetric Gauge Theory
We propose a gauge theory of gravitation. The gauge potential is a connection
of the Super SL(2,C) group. A MacDowell-Mansouri type of action is proposed
where the action is quadratic in the Super SL(2,C) curvature and depends purely
on gauge connection. By breaking the symmetry of the Super SL(2,C) topological
gauge theory to SL(2,C), a spinor metric is naturally defined. With an
auxiliary anti-commuting spinor field, the theory is reduced to general
relativity. The Hamiltonian variables are related to the ones given by
Ashtekar. The auxiliary spinor field plays the role of Witten spinor in the
positive energy proof for gravitation.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in Physics Letters
Singularities of Scattering Amplitudes on Unphysical Sheets and Their Interpretation
The analytic structure of two-particle scattering amplitudes on the unphysical sheet of the Riemann surface reached by crossing the two-particle cut is discussed. The singularities of the amplitudes there are shown to be poles and their physical interpretation is studied. The way in which bound states appear on the physical sheet in the Mandelstam representation, both as isolated poles and as cuts, is traced in detail. The properties of partial wave amplitudes and of the full amplitude as a function of energy and angle and of energy and momentum transfer are discussed. Finally, a few remarks are made in connection with unstable states
Instability of a Nielsen-Olesen vortex embedded in the electroweak theory; 2, electroweak vortices and gauge equivalence
Vortex configurations in the electroweak gauge theory are investigated. Two gauge-inequivalent solutions of the field equations, the Z and W vortices, have previously been found. They correspond to embeddings of the abelian Nielsen-Olesen vortex solution into a U(1) subgroup of SU(2)xU(1). It is shown here that any electroweak vortex solution can be mapped into a solution of the same energy with a vanishing upper component of the Higgs field. The correspondence is a gauge equivalence for all vortex solutions except those for which the winding numbers of the upper and lower Higgs components add to zero. This class of solutions, which includes the W vortex, instead corresponds to a singular solution in the one-component gauge. The results, combined with numerical investigations, provide an argument against the existence of other vortex solutions in the gauge-Higgs sector of the Standard Model
Composite powder particles
A liquid coating composition including a coating vehicle and composite powder particles disposed within the coating vehicle. Each composite powder particle may include a magnesium component, a zinc component, and an indium component
Compressive Phase Contrast Tomography
When x-rays penetrate soft matter, their phase changes more rapidly than
their amplitude. In- terference effects visible with high brightness sources
creates higher contrast, edge enhanced images. When the object is piecewise
smooth (made of big blocks of a few components), such higher con- trast
datasets have a sparse solution. We apply basis pursuit solvers to improve SNR,
remove ring artifacts, reduce the number of views and radiation dose from phase
contrast datasets collected at the Hard X-Ray Micro Tomography Beamline at the
Advanced Light Source. We report a GPU code for the most computationally
intensive task, the gridding and inverse gridding algorithm (non uniform
sampled Fourier transform).Comment: 5 pages, "Image Reconstruction from Incomplete Data VI" conference
7800, SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 1-5 August 2010 San Diego, CA
United State
The geometric role of symmetry breaking in gravity
In gravity, breaking symmetry from a group G to a group H plays the role of
describing geometry in relation to the geometry the homogeneous space G/H. The
deep reason for this is Cartan's "method of equivalence," giving, in
particular, an exact correspondence between metrics and Cartan connections. I
argue that broken symmetry is thus implicit in any gravity theory, for purely
geometric reasons. As an application, I explain how this kind of thinking gives
a new approach to Hamiltonian gravity in which an observer field spontaneously
breaks Lorentz symmetry and gives a Cartan connection on space.Comment: 4 pages. Contribution written for proceedings of the conference
"Loops 11" (Madrid, May 2011
Gravitational Wilson Loop in Discrete Quantum Gravity
Results for the gravitational Wilson loop, in particular the area law for
large loops in the strong coupling region, and the argument for an effective
positive cosmological constant discussed in a previous paper, are extended to
other proposed theories of discrete quantum gravity in the strong coupling
limit. We argue that the area law is a generic feature of almost all
non-perturbative lattice formulations, for sufficiently strong gravitational
coupling. The effects on gravitational Wilson loops of the inclusion of various
types of light matter coupled to lattice quantum gravity are discussed as well.
One finds that significant modifications to the area law can only arise from
extremely light matter particles. The paper ends with some general comments on
possible physically observable consequences.Comment: 39 pages, 10 figure
Coupling of Gravity to Matter via SO(3,2) Gauge Fields
We consider gravity from the quantum field theory point of view and introduce
a natural way of coupling gravity to matter by following the gauge principle
for particle interactions. The energy-momentum tensor for the matter fields is
shown to be conserved and follows as a consequence of the dynamics in a
spontaneously broken SO(3,2) gauge theory of gravity. All known interactions
are described by the gauge principle at the microscopic level.Comment: 12 latex page
A Relation Between Gravity in --Dimensions and Pontrjagin Topological Invariant
A relation between the MacDowell-Mansouri theory of gravity and the
Pontrjagin toplogical invariant in dimensions is discussed. This
relation may be of especial interest in the quest of finding a mechanism to go
from non-dynamical to dynamical gravity.Comment: 9 pages, Te
Riemann-Einstein Structure from Volume and Gauge Symmetry
It is shown how a metric structure can be induced in a simple way starting
with a gauge structure and a preferred volume, by spontaneous symmetry
breaking. A polynomial action, including coupling to matter, is constructed for
the symmetric phase. It is argued that assuming a preferred volume, in the
context of a metric theory, induces only a limited modification of the theory.Comment: LaTeX, 13 pages; Added additional reference in Reference
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