611 research outputs found
Hidden symmetry of the three-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell equations
It is shown how to generate three-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell fields from
known ones in the presence of a hypersurface-orthogonal non-null Killing vector
field. The continuous symmetry group is isomorphic to the Heisenberg group
including the Harrison-type transformation. The symmetry of the
Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton system is also studied and it is shown that there is
the transformation between the Maxwell and the dilaton fields.
This transformation is identified with the Geroch
transformation of the four-dimensional vacuum Einstein equation in terms of the
Ka{\l}uza-Klein mechanism.Comment: 5 page
Bulk inflaton shadows of vacuum gravity
We introduce a -dimensional vacuum description of five-dimensional
bulk inflaton models with exponential potentials that makes analysis of
cosmological perturbations simple and transparent. We show that various
solutions, including the power-law inflation model recently discovered by
Koyama and Takahashi, are generated from known -dimensional vacuum
solutions of pure gravity. We derive master equations for all types of
perturbations, and each of them becomes a second order differential equation
for one master variable supplemented by simple boundary conditions on the
brane. One exception is the case for massive modes of scalar perturbations. In
this case, there are two independent degrees of freedom, and in general it is
difficult to disentangle them into two separate sectors.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures, revtex; v2: references adde
Molecular dynamics study of melting of a bcc metal-vanadium II : thermodynamic melting
We present molecular dynamics simulations of the thermodynamic melting
transition of a bcc metal, vanadium using the Finnis-Sinclair potential. We
studied the structural, transport and energetic properties of slabs made of 27
atomic layers with a free surface. We investigated premelting phenomena at the
low-index surfaces of vanadium; V(111), V(001), and V(011), finding that as the
temperature increases, the V(111) surface disorders first, then the V(100)
surface, while the V(110) surface remains stable up to the melting temperature.
Also, as the temperature increases, the disorder spreads from the surface layer
into the bulk, establishing a thin quasiliquid film in the surface region. We
conclude that the hierarchy of premelting phenomena is inversely proportional
to the surface atomic density, being most pronounced for the V(111) surface
which has the lowest surface density
Brane cosmological solutions in six-dimensional warped flux compactifications
We study cosmology on a conical brane in the six-dimensional
Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton system, where the extra dimensions are compactified by
a magnetic flux. We systematically construct exact cosmological solutions using
the fact that the system is equivalently described by (6+n)-dimensional pure
Einstein-Maxwell theory via dimensional reduction. In particular, we find a
power-law inflationary solution for a general dilatonic coupling. When the
dilatonic coupling is given by that of Nishino-Sezgin chiral supergravity, this
reduces to the known solution which is not inflating. The power-law solution is
shown to be the late-time attractor. We also investigate cosmological tensor
perturbations in this model using the (6+n)-dimensional description. We obtain
the separable equation of motion and find that there always exist a zero mode,
while tachyonic modes are absent in the spectrum. The mass spectrum of
Kaluza-Klein modes is obtained numerically.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures; v2: references added; v3: version published in
JCA
Hybrid compactifications and brane gravity in six dimensions
We consider a six-dimensional axisymmetric Einstein-Maxwell model of warped
braneworlds. The bulk is bounded by two branes, one of which is a conical
3-brane and the other is a 4-brane wrapped around the axis of symmetry. The
latter brane is assumed to be our universe. If the tension of the 3-brane is
fine-tuned, it folds the internal two-dimensional space in a narrow cone,
making sufficiently small the Kaluza-Klein circle of the 4-brane. An arbitrary
energy-momentum tensor can be accommodated on this ring-like 4-brane. We study
linear perturbations sourced by matter on the brane, and show that weak gravity
is apparently described by a four-dimensional scalar-tensor theory. The extra
scalar degree of freedom can be interpreted as the fluctuation of the internal
space volume (or that of the circumference of the ring), the effect of which
turns out to be suppressed at long distances. Consequently, four-dimensional
Einstein gravity is reproduced on the brane. We point out that as in the
Randall-Sundrum model, the brane bending mode is crucial for recovering the
four-dimensional tensor structure in this setup.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures; v2: references added; v3: accepted for
publication in Class. Quant. Gra
No Black Hole Theorem in Three-Dimensional Gravity
A common property of known black hole solutions in (2+1)-dimensional gravity
is that they require a negative cosmological constant. In this letter, it is
shown that a (2+1)-dimensional gravity theory which satisfies the dominant
energy condition forbids the existence of a black hole to explain the above
situation.Comment: 3 pages, no figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter
Cosmology of intersecting brane world models in Gauss-Bonnet gravity
We study the cosmological properties of a codimension two brane world that
sits at the intersection between two four branes, in the framework of six
dimensional Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity. Due to contributions of the
Gauss-Bonnet terms, the junction conditions require the presence of localized
energy density on the codimension two defect. The induced metric on this
surface assumes a FRW form, with a scale factor associated to the position of
the brane in the background; we can embed on the codimension two defect the
preferred form of energy density. We present the cosmological evolution
equations for the three brane, showing that, for the case of pure AdS
backgrounds, they acquire the same form of the ones for the Randall-Sundrum II
model. When the background is different from pure AdS, the cosmological
behavior is potentially modified in respect to the typical one of codimension
one brane worlds. We discuss, in a particular model embedded in an AdS
black hole, the conditions one should satisfy in order to obtain standard
cosmology at late epochs.Comment: 19 pages, no figures, JHEP style. v2: Typos corrected and references
adde
Brane-bulk matter relation for a purely conical codimension-2 brane world
We study gravity on an infinitely thin codimension-2 brane world, with purely
conical singularities and in the presence of an induced gravity term on the
brane. We show that in this approximation, the energy momentum tensor of the
bulk is strongly related to the energy momentum tensor of the brane and thus
the gravity dynamics on the brane are induced by the bulk content. This is in
contrast with the gravity dynamics on a codimension-1 brane. We show how this
strong result is relaxed after including a Gauss-Bonnet term in the bulk.Comment: 12 pages, mistake corrected, references adde
The quantum critical point in CeRhIn_5: a resistivity study
The pressure--temperature phase diagram of CeRhIn_5 has been studied under
high magnetic field by resistivity measurements. Clear signatures of a quantum
critical point has been found at a critical pressure of p_c = 2.5 GPa. The
field induced magnetic state in the superconducting state is stable up to the
highest field. At p_c the antiferromagnetic ground-state under high magnetic
field collapses very rapidly. Clear signatures of p_c are the strong
enhancement of the resistivity in the normal state and of the inelastic
scattering term. No clear T2 temperature dependence could be found for
pressures above T_c. From the analysis of the upper critical field within a
strong coupling model we present the pressure dependence of the coupling
parameter lambda and the gyromagnetic ratio g. No signatures of a spatially
modulated order parameter could be evidenced. A detailed comparison with the
magnetic field--temperature phase diagram of CeCoIn_5 is given. The comparison
between CeRhIn_5 and CeCoIn_5 points out the importance to take into account
the field dependence of the effective mass in the calculation of the
superconducting upper critical field H_c2. It suggests also that when the
magnetic critical field H_(0) becomes lower than H_c2 (0)$, the persistence of
a superconducting pseudo-gap may stick the antiferromagnetism to H_c2 (0).Comment: 15 pages, 20 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Associations Between \u3cem\u3eSLC16A11\u3c/em\u3e Variants and Diabetes in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL)
Five sequence variants in SLC16A11 (rs117767867, rs13342692, rs13342232, rs75418188, and rs75493593), which occur in two non-reference haplotypes, were recently shown to be associated with diabetes in Mexicans from the SIGMA consortium. We aimed to determine whether these previous findings would replicate in the HCHS/SOL Mexican origin group and whether genotypic effects were similar in other HCHS/SOL groups. We analyzed these five variants in 2492 diabetes cases and 5236 controls from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL), which includes U.S. participants from six diverse background groups (Mainland groups: Mexican, Central American, and South American; and Caribbean groups: Puerto Rican, Cuban, and Dominican). We estimated the SNP-diabetes association in the six groups and in the combined sample. We found that the risk alleles occur in two non-reference haplotypes in HCHS/SOL, as in the SIGMA Mexicans. The haplotype frequencies were very similar between SIGMA Mexicans and the HCHS/SOL Mainland groups, but different in the Caribbean groups. The SLC16A11 sequence variants were significantly associated with risk for diabetes in the Mexican origin group (P = 0.025), replicating the SIGMA findings. However, these variants were not significantly associated with diabetes in a combined analysis of all groups, although the power to detect such effects was 85% (assuming homogeneity of effects among the groups). Additional analyses performed separately in each of the five non-Mexican origin groups were not significant. We also analyzed (1) exclusion of young controls and, (2) SNP by BMI interactions, but neither was significant in the HCHS/SOL data. The previously reported effects of SLC16A11 variants on diabetes in Mexican samples was replicated in a large Mexican-American sample, but these effects were not significant in five non-Mexican Hispanic/Latino groups sampled from U.S. populations. Lack of replication in the HCHS/SOL non-Mexicans, and in the entire HCHS/SOL sample combined may represent underlying genetic heterogeneity. These results indicate a need for future genetic research to consider heterogeneity of the Hispanic/Latino population in the assessment of disease risk, but add to the evidence suggesting SLC16A11 as a potential therapeutic target for type 2 diabetes
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