888 research outputs found
Phase structure of black branes in grand canonical ensemble
This is a companion paper of our previous work [1] where we studied the
thermodynamics and phase structure of asymptotically flat black -branes in a
cavity in arbitrary dimensions in a canonical ensemble. In this work we
study the thermodynamics and phase structure of the same in a grand canonical
ensemble. Since the boundary data in two cases are different (for the grand
canonical ensemble boundary potential is fixed instead of the charge as in
canonical ensemble) the stability analysis and the phase structure in the two
cases are quite different. In particular, we find that there exists an analog
of one-variable analysis as in canonical ensemble, which gives the same
stability condition as the rather complicated known (but generalized from black
holes to the present case) two-variable analysis. When certain condition for
the fixed potential is satisfied, the phase structure of charged black
-branes is in some sense similar to that of the zero charge black -branes
in canonical ensemble up to a certain temperature. The new feature in the
present case is that above this temperature, unlike the zero-charge case, the
stable brane phase no longer exists and `hot flat space' is the stable phase
here. In the grand canonical ensemble there is an analog of Hawking-Page
transition, even for the charged black -brane, as opposed to the canonical
ensemble. Our study applies to non-dilatonic as well as dilatonic black
-branes in space-time dimensions.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figures, various points refined, discussion expanded,
references updated, typos corrected, published in JHEP 1105:091,201
Phase transitions and critical behavior of black branes in canonical ensemble
We study the thermodynamics and phase structure of asymptotically flat
non-dilatonic as well as dilatonic black branes in a cavity in arbitrary
dimensions (). We consider the canonical ensemble and so the charge inside
the cavity and the temperature at the wall are fixed. We analyze the stability
of the black brane equilibrium states and derive the phase structures. For the
zero charge case we find an analog of Hawking-Page phase transition for these
black branes in arbitrary dimensions. When the charge is non-zero, we find that
below a critical value of the charge, the phase diagram has a line of
first-order phase transition in a certain range of temperatures which ends up
at a second order phase transition point (critical point) as the charge attains
the critical value. We calculate the critical exponents at that critical point.
Although our discussion is mainly concerned with the non-dilatonic branes, we
show how it easily carries over to the dilatonic branes as well.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures, the validity of using the effective action
discussed, references adde
Ultraspinning instability of anti-de Sitter black holes
Myers-Perry black holes with a single spin in d>5 have been shown to be
unstable if rotating sufficiently rapidly. We extend the numerical analysis
which allowed for that result to the asymptotically AdS case. We determine
numerically the stationary perturbations that mark the onset of the
instabilities for the modes that preserve the rotational symmetries of the
background. The parameter space of solutions is thoroughly analysed, and the
onset of the instabilities is obtained as a function of the cosmological
constant. Each of these perturbations has been conjectured to represent a
bifurcation point to a new phase of stationary AdS black holes, and this is
consistent with our results.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures. v2: Reference added. Matches published versio
Brane-world black holes and the scale of gravity
A particle in four dimensions should behave like a classical black hole if
the horizon radius is larger than the Compton wavelength or, equivalently, if
its degeneracy (measured by entropy in units of the Planck scale) is large. For
spherically symmetric black holes in 4 + d dimensions, both arguments again
lead to a mass threshold MC and degeneracy scale Mdeg of the order of the
fundamental scale of gravity MG. In the brane-world, deviations from the
Schwarzschild metric induced by bulk effects alter the horizon radius and
effective four-dimensional Euclidean action in such a way that MC \simeq Mdeg
might be either larger or smaller than MG. This opens up the possibility that
black holes exist with a mass smaller than MG and might be produced at the LHC
even if M>10 TeV, whereas effects due to bulk graviton exchanges remain
undetectable because suppressed by inverse powers of MG. Conversely, even if
black holes are not found at the LHC, it is still possible that MC>MG and MG
\simeq 1TeV.Comment: 4 pages, no figur
Quantum Back Reaction to asymptotically AdS Black Holes
We analyze the effects of the back reaction due to a conformal field theory
(CFT) on a black hole spacetime with negative cosmological constant. We study
the geometry numerically obtained by taking into account the energy momentum
tensor of CFT approximated by a radiation fluid. We find a sequence of
configurations without a horizon in thermal equilibrium (CFT stars), followed
by a sequence of configurations with a horizon. We discuss the thermodynamic
properties of the system and how back reaction effects alter the space-time
structure. We also provide an interpretation of the above sequence of solutions
in terms of the AdS/CFT correspondence. The dual five-dimensional description
is given by the Karch-Randall model, in which a sequence of five-dimensional
floating black holes followed by a sequence of brane localized black holes
correspond to the above solutions.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Theoretical survey of tidal-charged black holes at the LHC
We analyse a family of brane-world black holes which solve the effective
four-dimensional Einstein equations for a wide range of parameters related to
the unknown bulk/brane physics. We first constrain the parameters using known
experimental bounds and, for the allowed cases, perform a numerical analysis of
their time evolution, which includes accretion through the Earth. The study is
aimed at predicting the typical behavior one can expect if such black holes
were produced at the LHC. Most notably, we find that, under no circumstances,
would the black holes reach the (hazardous) regime of Bondi accretion.
Nonetheless, the possibility remains that black holes live long enough to
escape from the accelerator (and even from the Earth's gravitational field) and
result in missing energy from the detectors.Comment: RevTeX4, 12 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, minor changes to match the
accepted version in JHE
An instability of higher-dimensional rotating black holes
We present the first example of a linearized gravitational instability of an
asymptotically flat vacuum black hole. We study perturbations of a Myers-Perry
black hole with equal angular momenta in an odd number of dimensions. We find
no evidence of any instability in five or seven dimensions, but in nine
dimensions, for sufficiently rapid rotation, we find perturbations that grow
exponentially in time. The onset of instability is associated with the
appearance of time-independent perturbations which generically break all but
one of the rotational symmetries. This is interpreted as evidence for the
existence of a new 70-parameter family of black hole solutions with only a
single rotational symmetry. We also present results for the Gregory-Laflamme
instability of rotating black strings, demonstrating that rotation makes black
strings more unstable.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figure
New AdS solitons and brane worlds with compact extra-dimensions
We construct new static, asymptotically AdS solutions where the conformal
infinity is the product of Minkowski spacetime and a sphere . Both
globally regular, soliton-type solutions and black hole solutions are
considered. The black holes can be viewed as natural AdS generalizations of the
Schwarzschild black branes in Kaluza-Klein theory. The solitons provide new
brane-world models with compact extra-dimensions. Different from the
Randall-Sundrum single-brane scenario, a Schwarzschild black hole on the Ricci
flat part of these branes does not lead to a naked singularity in the bulk.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figure
Characterizing and quantifying the effects of breast cancer therapy using mathematical modeling
We designed a mathematical model to describe and quantify the mechanisms and dynamics of tumor growth, cell-kill and resistance as they affect durations of benefit after cancer treatment. Our aim was to explore how treatment efficacy may be related to primary tumor characteristics, with the potential to guide future trial design and appropriate selection of therapy. Assuming a log-normal distribution of both resistant disease and tumor doubling times generates disease-free survival (DFS) or invasive DFS curves with specific shapes. Using a multivariate mathematical model, both treatment and tumor characteristics are related to quantified resistant disease and tumor regrowth rates by allowing different mean values for the influence of different treatments or clinical subtypes on these two log-normal distributions. Application of the model to the CALGB 9741 adjuvant breast cancer trial showed that dose-dense therapy was estimated to achieve an extra 3/4 log of cell-kill compared to standard therapy, but only in patients with more rapidly growing ER-negative tumors. Application of the model to the AZURE trial of adjuvant bisphosphonate treatment suggested that the 5-year duration of zoledronic acid was adequate for ER-negative tumors, but may not be so for ER-positive cases, with increased recurrences after ceasing the intervention. Mathematical models can identify different effects of treatment by subgroup and may aid in treatment design, trial analysis, and appropriate selection of therapy. They may provide a more appropriate and insightful tool than the conventional Cox model for the statistical analysis of response durations
Investigating Prosodic Accommodation in Clinical Interviews with Depressed Patients
Six in-depth clinical interviews, involving six elderly female patients (aged 60+) and one female psychiatrist, were recorded and analysed for a number of prosodic accommodation variables.
Our analysis focused on pitch, speaking time, and vowel-space ratio. Findings indicate that there is a dynamic manifestation of prosodic accommodation over the course of the interactions. There is clear adaptation on the part of the psychiatrist, even going so far as to have a reduced vowel-space ratio, mirroring a reduced vowel-space ratio in the depressed patients. Previous research has found a reduced vowel-space ratio to be associated with psychological distress; however, we suggest that it indicates a high level of adaptation on the part of the psychiatrist and needs to be considered when analysing psychiatric clinical interactions
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