687 research outputs found
Quantum Mechanics of a Point Particle in 2+1 Dimensional Gravity
We study the phase space structure and the quantization of a pointlike
particle in 2+1 dimensional gravity. By adding boundary terms to the first
order Einstein Hilbert action, and removing all redundant gauge degrees of
freedom, we arrive at a reduced action for a gravitating particle in 2+1
dimensions, which is invariant under Lorentz transformations and a group of
generalized translations. The momentum space of the particle turns out to be
the group manifold SL(2). Its position coordinates have non-vanishing Poisson
brackets, resulting in a non-commutative quantum spacetime. We use the
representation theory of SL(2) to investigate its structure. We find a
discretization of time, and some semi-discrete structure of space. An
uncertainty relation forbids a fully localized particle. The quantum dynamics
is described by a discretized Klein Gordon equation.Comment: 58 pages, 3 eps figures, presentation of the classical theory
improve
The 2+1 Kepler Problem and Its Quantization
We study a system of two pointlike particles coupled to three dimensional
Einstein gravity. The reduced phase space can be considered as a deformed
version of the phase space of two special-relativistic point particles in the
centre of mass frame. When the system is quantized, we find some possibly
general effects of quantum gravity, such as a minimal distances and a foaminess
of the spacetime at the order of the Planck length. We also obtain a
quantization of geometry, which restricts the possible asymptotic geometries of
the universe.Comment: 59 pages, LaTeX2e, 9 eps figure
Mechanical Instabilities of Biological Tubes
We study theoretically the shapes of biological tubes affected by various
pathologies. When epithelial cells grow at an uncontrolled rate, the negative
tension produced by their division provokes a buckling instability. Several
shapes are investigated : varicose, enlarged, sinusoidal or sausage-like, all
of which are found in pathologies of tracheal, renal tubes or arteries. The
final shape depends crucially on the mechanical parameters of the tissues :
Young modulus, wall-to-lumen ratio, homeostatic pressure. We argue that since
tissues must be in quasistatic mechanical equilibrium, abnormal shapes convey
information as to what causes the pathology. We calculate a phase diagram of
tubular instabilities which could be a helpful guide for investigating the
underlying genetic regulation
(2+1)-dimensional Einstein-Kepler problem in the centre-of-mass frame
We formulate and analyze the Hamiltonian dynamics of a pair of massive
spinless point particles in (2+1)-dimensional Einstein gravity by anchoring the
system to a conical infinity, isometric to the infinity generated by a single
massive but possibly spinning particle. The reduced phase space \Gamma_{red}
has dimension four and topology R^3 x S^1. \Gamma_{red} is analogous to the
phase space of a Newtonian two-body system in the centre-of-mass frame, and we
find on \Gamma_{red} a canonical chart that makes this analogue explicit and
reduces to the Newtonian chart in the appropriate limit. Prospects for
quantization are commented on.Comment: 38 pages, REVTeX v3.1 with amsfonts and epsf, 12 eps figures. (v2:
Presentational improvement, references added, typos corrected.
Hamiltonian structure and quantization of 2+1 dimensional gravity coupled to particles
It is shown that the reduced particle dynamics of 2+1 dimensional gravity in
the maximally slicing gauge has hamiltonian form. This is proved directly for
the two body problem and for the three body problem by using the Garnier
equations for isomonodromic transformations. For a number of particles greater
than three the existence of the hamiltonian is shown to be a consequence of a
conjecture by Polyakov which connects the auxiliary parameters of the fuchsian
differential equation which solves the SU(1,1) Riemann-Hilbert problem, to the
Liouville action of the conformal factor which describes the space-metric. We
give the exact diffeomorphism which transforms the expression of the spinning
cone geometry in the Deser, Jackiw, 't Hooft gauge to the maximally slicing
gauge. It is explicitly shown that the boundary term in the action, written in
hamiltonian form gives the hamiltonian for the reduced particle dynamics. The
quantum mechanical translation of the two particle hamiltonian gives rise to
the logarithm of the Laplace-Beltrami operator on a cone whose angular deficit
is given by the total energy of the system irrespective of the masses of the
particles thus proving at the quantum level a conjecture by 't Hooft on the two
particle dynamics. The quantum mechanical Green's function for the two body
problem is given.Comment: 34 pages LaTe
The twoâway relationship between ionospheric outflow and the ring current
It is now well established that the ionosphere, because it acts as a significant source of plasma, plays a critical role in ring current dynamics. However, because the ring current deposits energy into the ionosphere, the inverse may also be true: the ring current can play a critical role in the dynamics of ionospheric outflow. This study uses a set of coupled, firstâprinciplesâbased numerical models to test the dependence of ionospheric outflow on ring currentâdriven region 2 fieldâaligned currents (FACs). A moderate magnetospheric storm event is modeled with the Space Weather Modeling Framework using a global MHD code (Block Adaptive Tree Solar wind Roeâtype Upwind Scheme, BATSâRâUS), a polar wind model (Polar Wind Outflow Model), and a bounceâaveraged kinetic ring current model (ring current atmosphere interaction model with selfâconsistent magnetic field, RAMâSCB). Initially, each code is twoâway coupled to all others except for RAMâSCB, which receives inputs from the other models but is not allowed to feed back pressure into the MHD model. The simulation is repeated with pressure coupling activated, which drives strong pressure gradients and region 2 FACs in BATSâRâUS. It is found that the region 2 FACs increase heavy ion outflow by up to 6 times over the noncoupled results. The additional outflow further energizes the ring current, establishing an ionosphereâmagnetosphere mass feedback loop. This study further demonstrates that ionospheric outflow is not merely a plasma source for the magnetosphere but an integral part in the nonlinear ionosphereâmagnetosphereâring current system.Key PointsRegion 2 fieldâaligned currents drive additional ionospheric O+ outflowThis additional outflow feeds the ring current, creating a feedback systemIonospheric outflow is a tightly coupled piece of the MâI systemPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/112284/1/jgra51836.pd
Gravity in 2+1 dimensions as a Riemann-Hilbert problem
In this paper we consider 2+1-dimensional gravity coupled to N
point-particles. We introduce a gauge in which the - and
-components of the dreibein field become holomorphic and
anti-holomorphic respectively. As a result we can restrict ourselves to the
complex plane. Next we show that solving the dreibein-field: is
equivalent to solving the Riemann-Hilbert problem for the group . We
give the explicit solution for 2 particles in terms of hypergeometric
functions. In the N-particle case we give a representation in terms of
conformal field theory. The dreibeins are expressed as correlators of 2 free
fermion fields and twistoperators at the position of the particles.Comment: 32 pages Latex, 4 figures (uuencoded
How valid are assessments of conception probability in ovulatory cycle research? Evaluations, recommendations, and theoretical implications
Over the past two decades, a large literature examining psychological changes across women's ovulatory cycles has accumulated, emphasizing comparisons between fertile and non-fertile phases of the cycle. While some studies have verified ovulation using luteinizing hormone (LH) tests, counting methods â assessments of conception probability based on counting forward from actual or retrospectively recalled onset of last menses, or backward from actual or anticipated onset of next menses â are more common. The validity of these methods remains largely unexplored. Based on published data on the distributions of the lengths of follicular and luteal phases, we created a sample of 58,000+ simulated cycles. We used the sample to assess the validity of counting methods. Aside from methods that count backward from a confirmed onset of next menses, validities are modest, generally ranging from about .40â.55. We offer power estimates and make recommendations for future work. We also discuss implications for interpreting past research
Patient Selection for Bronchoscopic Lung Volume Reduction
Purpose: Bronchoscopic lung volume reduction (BLVR) is a valuable treatment option for carefully selected patients with severe COPD. There is limited knowledge about the characteristics and outcomes of patients referred to a specialized center for BLVR. The study objectives were to investigate the selection rate for BLVR treatment in patients referred for this treatment and to investigate the differences between patients that were selected for BLVR and patients that were not. Patients and Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of patients with severe COPD who were referred to our hospital to assess eligibility for BLVR treatment. Our parameters included demographics, comorbidity, chest computed tomography characteristics, reasons for rejection from BLVR treatment and patient survival. Results: In total, 1500 patients were included (mean age 62 years, 50% female and forced expiratory volume in 1 s 33% of predicted). Out of this group, 282 (19%) patients were selected for BLVR treatment. The absence of a suitable target lobe for treatment, an unsuitable disease phenotype and insufficient lung hyperinflation were the most important factors for not being selected. Patients that were selected for any BLVR option lived significantly longer than the group of patients that were not selected for BLVR (median 3060 versus 2079 days, P<0.001). Conclusion: We found that only a small proportion of patients that are referred for BLVR treatment is eligible for a BLVR treatment, indicating a need for both better referral tools and for the development of new therapies for this group of patients. Furthermore, our data suggest that selection for BLVR is associated with a significant survival benefit
Efficient Attack Graph Analysis through Approximate Inference
Attack graphs provide compact representations of the attack paths that an
attacker can follow to compromise network resources by analysing network
vulnerabilities and topology. These representations are a powerful tool for
security risk assessment. Bayesian inference on attack graphs enables the
estimation of the risk of compromise to the system's components given their
vulnerabilities and interconnections, and accounts for multi-step attacks
spreading through the system. Whilst static analysis considers the risk posture
at rest, dynamic analysis also accounts for evidence of compromise, e.g. from
SIEM software or forensic investigation. However, in this context, exact
Bayesian inference techniques do not scale well. In this paper we show how
Loopy Belief Propagation - an approximate inference technique - can be applied
to attack graphs, and that it scales linearly in the number of nodes for both
static and dynamic analysis, making such analyses viable for larger networks.
We experiment with different topologies and network clustering on synthetic
Bayesian attack graphs with thousands of nodes to show that the algorithm's
accuracy is acceptable and converge to a stable solution. We compare sequential
and parallel versions of Loopy Belief Propagation with exact inference
techniques for both static and dynamic analysis, showing the advantages of
approximate inference techniques to scale to larger attack graphs.Comment: 30 pages, 14 figure
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