8,910 research outputs found
Extremal black holes in D=4 Gauss-Bonnet gravity
We show that four-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton-Gauss-Bonnet gravity
admits asymptotically flat black hole solutions with a degenerate event horizon
of the Reissner-Nordstr\"om type . Such black holes exist for
the dilaton coupling constant within the interval .
Black holes must be endowed with an electric charge and (possibly) with
magnetic charge (dyons) but they can not be purely magnetic. Purely electric
solutions are constructed numerically and the critical dilaton coupling is
determined . For each value of the dilaton
coupling within this interval and for a fixed value of the Gauss--Bonnet
coupling we have a family of black holes parameterized by their
electric charge. Relation between the mass, the electric charge and the dilaton
charge at both ends of the allowed interval of is reminiscent of the BPS
condition for dilaton black holes in the Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton theory. The
entropy of the DGB extremal black holes is twice the Bekenstein-Hawking
entropy.Comment: New material and references added, errors corrected including higher
decimals in a_cr, figures improve
Vacuum Interpretation for Supergravity M-Branes
A non-local classical duality between the three-block truncated 11D
supergravity and the 8D vacuum gravity with two commuting Killing symmetries is
established. The supergravity four-form field is generated via an inverse
dualisation of the corresponding Killing two-forms in six dimensions. 11D
supersymmetry condition is shown to be equivalent to existence of covariantly
constant spinors in eight dimensions. Thus any solution to the vacuum Einstein
equations in eight dimensions depending on six coordinates and admitting
Killing spinors have supersymmetric 11D-supergravity counterparts. Using this
duality we derive some new brane solutions to 11D-supergravity including 1/4
supersymmetric intersecting M-branes with a NUT parameter and a dyon solution
joining the M2 and M5-branes intersecting at a point.Comment: 4 pages, latex, no figure
Study of Decays in the Family Non-universal Models
In a combined investigation of the decays,
constraints on the related couplings in family non-universal
models are derived. We find that within the allowed parameter space, the
recently observed forward-backward asymmetry in the
decay can be explained, by flipping the signs of the Wilson coefficients
and . With the obtained constraints, we also calculate
the branching ratio of the decay. The upper bound of our
prediction is near the upper bound given by CDF Collaboration recently.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, some errors corrected; Journal versio
Phase-sensitive quantum effects in Andreev conductance of the SNS system of metals with macroscopic phase breaking length
The dissipative component of electron transport through the doubly connected
SNS Andreev interferometer indium (S)-aluminium (N)-indium (S) has been
studied. Within helium temperature range, the conductance of the individual
sections of the interferometer exhibits phase-sensitive oscillations of
quantum-interference nature. In the non-domain (normal) state of indium
narrowing adjacent to NS interface, the nonresonance oscillations have been
observed, with the period inversely proportional to the area of the
interferometer orifice. In the domain intermediate state of the narrowing, the
magneto-temperature resistive oscillations appeared, with the period determined
by the coherence length in the magnetic field equal to the critical one. The
oscillating component of resonance form has been observed in the conductance of
the macroscopic N-aluminium part of the system. The phase of the oscillations
appears to be shifted by compared to that of nonresonance oscillations.
We offer an explanation in terms of the contribution into Josephson current
from the coherent quasiparticles with energies of order of the Thouless energy.
The behavior of dissipative transport with temperature has been studied in a
clean normal metal in the vicinity of a single point NS contact.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Low Temp. Phys., v. 29, No.
12, 200
Bertotti-Robinson solutions of D=5 Einstein-Maxwell-Chern-Simons-Lambda theory
We present a series of new solutions in five-dimensional
Einstein-Maxwell-Chern-Simons theory with an arbitrary Chern-Simons coupling
and a cosmological constant . For general and
we give various generalizations of the Bertotti-Robinson solutions
supported by electric and magnetic fluxes, some of which presumably describe
the near-horizon regions of black strings or black rings. Among them there is a
solution which could apply to the horizon of a topological AdS black ring in
gauged minimal supergravity. Others are horizonless and geodesically complete.
We also construct extremal asymptotically flat multi-string solutions for
and arbitrary .Comment: 17 pages, revtex
Global solutions for higher-dimensional stretched small black holes
Small black holes in heterotic string theory have vanishing horizon area at
the supergravity level, but the horizon is stretched to the finite radius
geometry once higher curvature corrections are turned
on. This has been demonstrated to give good agreement with microscopic entropy
counting. Previous considerations, however, were based on the classical local
solutions valid only in the vicinity of the event horizon. Here we address the
question of global existence of extremal black holes in the -dimensional
Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton theory with the Gauss-Bonnet term introducing a
variable dilaton coupling as a parameter. We show that asymptotically flat
black holes exist only in a bounded region of the dilaton couplings where depends on . For (but not for ) the allowed range of includes the heterotic string values. For numerical solutions meet weak naked singularities at finite radii
(spherical cusps), where the scalar curvature diverges as
. For cusps are met in pairs, so that
solutions can be formally extended to asymptotically flat infinity choosing a
suitable integration variable. We show, however, that radial geodesics cannot
be continued through the cusp singularities, so such a continuation is
unphysical.Comment: 26 pages, 19 figures, minor correction
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