7,376 research outputs found
Geometric Cone Surfaces and (2+1)- Gravity coupled to Particles
We introduce the (2+1)-spacetimes with compact space of genus g and with r
gravitating particles which arise by ``Minkowskian suspensions of flat or
hyperbolic cone surfaces'', by ``distinguished deformations'' of hyperbolic
suspensions and by ``patchworking'' of suspensions. Similarly to the
matter-free case, these spacetimes have nice properties with respect to the
canonical Cosmological Time Function. When the values of the masses are
sufficiently large and the cone points are suitably spaced, the distinguished
deformations of hyperbolic suspensions determine a relevant open subset of the
full parameter space; this open subset is homeomorphic to the product of an
Euclidean space of dimension 6g-6+2r with an open subset of the Teichm\"uller
Space of Riemann surfaces of genus g with r punctures. By patchworking of
suspensions one can produce examples of spacetimes which are not distinguished
deformations of any hyperbolic suspensions, although they have the same masses;
in fact, we will guess that they belong to different connected components of
the parameter space.Comment: 14 pages Late
Neural Relax
We present an algorithm for data preprocessing of an associative memory
inspired to an electrostatic problem that turns out to have intimate relations
with information maximization
(2+1)-Dimensional Quantum Gravity as the Continuum Limit of Causal Dynamical Triangulations
We perform a non-perturbative sum over geometries in a (2+1)-dimensional
quantum gravity model given in terms of Causal Dynamical Triangulations.
Inspired by the concept of triangulations of product type introduced
previously, we impose an additional notion of order on the discrete, causal
geometries. This simplifies the combinatorial problem of counting geometries
just enough to enable us to calculate the transfer matrix between boundary
states labelled by the area of the spatial universe, as well as the
corresponding quantum Hamiltonian of the continuum theory. This is the first
time in dimension larger than two that a Hamiltonian has been derived from such
a model by mainly analytical means, and opens the way for a better
understanding of scaling and renormalization issues.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figure
Topological classification of black Hole: Generic Maxwell set and crease set of horizon
The crease set of an event horizon or a Cauchy horizon is an important object
which determines qualitative properties of the horizon. In particular, it
determines the possible topologies of the spatial sections of the horizon. By
Fermat's principle in geometric optics, we relate the crease set and the
Maxwell set of a smooth function in the context of singularity theory. We
thereby give a classification of generic topological structure of the Maxwell
sets and the generic topologies of the spatial section of the horizon.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Fractal Structure of Loop Quantum Gravity
In this paper we have calculated the spectral dimension of loop quantum
gravity (LQG) using simple arguments coming from the area spectrum at different
length scales. We have obtained that the spectral dimension of the spatial
section runs from 2 to 3, across a 1.5 phase, when the energy of a probe scalar
field decrees from high to low energy. We have calculated the spectral
dimension of the space-time also using results from spin-foam models, obtaining
a 2-dimensional effective manifold at hight energy. Our result is consistent
with other two approach to non perturbative quantum gravity: causal dynamical
triangulation and asymptotic safety quantum gravity.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
A computationally fast and accurate procedure for the identification of the Chaboche isotropic-kinematic hardening model parameters based on strain-controlled cycles and asymptotic ratcheting rate
The Chaboche isotropic-kinematic hardening (CIKH) model provides a versatile and realistic description of the material stress–strain behavior under generic multiaxial cyclic loadings. However, identifying the backstress parameters is challenging, and can be formulated as an optimization problem using different approaches. Instead of a computationally expensive pointwise search, in this paper the global properties of the cyclic curves are fitted to the experimental data. The conditions introduced are the hysteresis areas, peak stress values and tangent moduli at the extreme points, however the framework can be easily adapted to other target quantities. One linear and two non-linear backstress components of the kinematic hardening model are introduced, although the analytical equations developed can be used to refine the model further, with more components. Two stabilized cycles are required to identify the main kinematic parameters. New analytical expressions for asymptotic ratcheting rates in uniaxial tests are developed and then used to tune the dynamics of the slightly non-linear (hence, slowest) backstress component. After obtaining the kinematic parameters, isotropic hardening laws can also be identified, by considering the evolution of the extreme points of the strain-controlled cycles before stabilization. Practical demonstrations of the procedure are provided by experimental tests carried out on a 7075-T6 aluminum alloy, 42CrMo4+QT steel, and a high-silicon ferritic ductile cast iron. An accurate reproduction of the material behavior is achieved, at a negligible computational cost
Cosmological measurements, time and observables in (2+1)-dimensional gravity
We investigate the relation between measurements and the physical observables
for vacuum spacetimes with compact spatial surfaces in (2+1)-gravity with
vanishing cosmological constant. By considering an observer who emits lightrays
that return to him at a later time, we obtain explicit expressions for several
measurable quantities as functions on the physical phase space of the theory:
the eigentime elapsed between the emission of a lightray and its return to the
observer, the angles between the directions into which the light has to be
emitted to return to the observer and the relative frequencies of the lightrays
at their emission and return. This provides a framework in which conceptual
questions about time, observables and measurements can be addressed. We analyse
the properties of these measurements and their geometrical interpretation and
show how they allow an observer to determine the values of the Wilson loop
observables that parametrise the physical phase space of (2+1)-gravity. We
discuss the role of time in the theory and demonstrate that the specification
of an observer with respect to the spacetime's geometry amounts to a gauge
fixing procedure yielding Dirac observables.Comment: 38 pages, 11 eps figures, typos corrected, references update
Geometry and observables in (2+1)-gravity
We review the geometrical properties of vacuum spacetimes in (2+1)-gravity
with vanishing cosmological constant. We explain how these spacetimes are
characterised as quotients of their universal cover by holonomies. We explain
how this description can be used to clarify the geometrical interpretation of
the fundamental physical variables of the theory, holonomies and Wilson loops.
In particular, we discuss the role of Wilson loop observables as the generators
of the two fundamental transformations that change the geometry of
(2+1)-spacetimes, grafting and earthquake. We explain how these variables can
be determined from realistic measurements by an observer in the spacetime.Comment: Talk given at 2nd School and Workshop on Quantum Gravity and Quantum
Geometry (Corfu, September 13-20 2009); 10 pages, 13 eps figure
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