526 research outputs found
The Barbero-Immirzi Parameter as a Scalar Field: K-Inflation from Loop Quantum Gravity?
We consider a loop-quantum gravity inspired modification of general
relativity, where the Holst action is generalized by making the Barbero-Immirzi
(BI) parameter a scalar field, whose value could be dynamically determined. The
modified theory leads to a non-zero torsion tensor that corrects the field
equations through quadratic first-derivatives of the BI field. Such a
correction is equivalent to general relativity in the presence of a scalar
field with non-trivial kinetic energy. This stress-energy of this field is
automatically covariantly conserved by its own dynamical equations of motion,
thus satisfying the strong equivalence principle. Every general relativistic
solution remains a solution to the modified theory for any constant value of
the BI field. For arbitrary time-varying BI fields, a study of cosmological
solutions reduces the scalar field stress-energy to that of a pressureless
perfect fluid in a comoving reference frame, forcing the scale factor dynamics
to be equivalent to those of a stiff equation of state. Upon ultraviolet
completion, this model could provide a natural mechanism for k-inflation, where
the role of the inflaton is played by the BI field and inflation is driven by
its non-trivial kinetic energy instead of a potential.Comment: Phys. Rev. D78, 064070 (2008
Extreme Mass-Ratio Inspirals in the Effective-One-Body Approach: Quasi-Circular, Equatorial Orbits around a Spinning Black Hole
We construct effective-one-body waveform models suitable for data analysis
with LISA for extreme-mass ratio inspirals in quasi-circular, equatorial orbits
about a spinning supermassive black hole. The accuracy of our model is
established through comparisons against frequency-domain, Teukolsky-based
waveforms in the radiative approximation. The calibration of eight high-order
post-Newtonian parameters in the energy flux suffices to obtain a phase and
fractional amplitude agreement of better than 1 radian and 1 % respectively
over a period between 2 and 6 months depending on the system considered. This
agreement translates into matches higher than 97 % over a period between 4 and
9 months, depending on the system. Better agreements can be obtained if a
larger number of calibration parameters are included. Higher-order mass ratio
terms in the effective-one-body Hamiltonian and radiation-reaction introduce
phase corrections of at most 30 radians in a one year evolution. These
corrections are usually one order of magnitude larger than those introduced by
the spin of the small object in a one year evolution. These results suggest
that the effective-one-body approach for extreme mass ratio inspirals is a good
compromise between accuracy and computational price for LISA data analysis
purposes.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Comparación de diferentes parámetros de evaluación en sujetos con asma moderada estable sin exacerbación microbiana, tratados con Salmeterol-Fluticasona vs Ciclesonida y Salbutamol a demanda
El asma es una entidad clínica caracterizada por la combinación de tres
factores: obstrucción de la vía aérea con reversibilidad espontánea y/o
farmacológica, hiperrreactividad bronquial e inflamación local. Existen
numerosas alternativas farmacológicas para el tratamiento de esta enfermedad.
En el presente trabajo se compararon parámetros de evaluación del estado
asmático moderado, los episodios de exacerbación de etiología bacteriana y la
colonización bucal por hongos en dos grupos de pacientes; 15 tratados con
ciclesonida en dosis alta y salbutamol a demanda y 13 con salmeterol
fluticasona en dosis fija durante 300 días de tratamiento. Hasta el momento se
observó que ambas alternativas terapéuticas son válidas para el control de la
enfermedad, ya que a pesar de la presencia en esputo, de bacterias
potencialmente capaces de producir exacerbaciones, estas no ocurrieron
durante el tiempo del estudio. La colonización por hongos de la cavidad oral se
presentó en ambos grupos. Los parámetros de función pulmonar fueron
comparables.Fil: Sagua, M..
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área MicrobiologíaFil: Elías, P..
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área Farmacología.Fil: Telechea, A..
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área MicrobiologíaFil: Molina, A..
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área Clínica MédicaFil: Garófoli, A..
Hospital Militar Regional Mendoza. Servicio de NeumonologíaFil: Fazio, C..
Hospital Militar Regional Mendoza. Servicio de NeumonologíaFil: Montbrun, M..
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área MicrobiologíaFil: Yunes, Roberto.
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área Farmacología.Fil: Montoya, P..
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Área Farmacología
Metric of a tidally perturbed spinning black hole
We explicitly construct the metric of a Kerr black hole that is tidally
perturbed by the external universe in the slow-motion approximation. This
approximation assumes that the external universe changes slowly relative to the
rotation rate of the hole, thus allowing the parameterization of the
Newman-Penrose scalar by time-dependent electric and magnetic tidal
tensors. This approximation, however, does not constrain how big the spin of
the background hole can be and, in principle, the perturbed metric can model
rapidly spinning holes. We first generate a potential by acting with a
differential operator on . From this potential we arrive at the metric
perturbation by use of the Chrzanowski procedure in the ingoing radiation
gauge. We provide explicit analytic formulae for this metric perturbation in
spherical Kerr-Schild coordinates, where the perturbation is finite at the
horizon. This perturbation is parametrized by the mass and Kerr spin parameter
of the background hole together with the electric and magnetic tidal tensors
that describe the time evolution of the perturbation produced by the external
universe. In order to take the metric accurate far away from the hole, these
tidal tensors should be determined by asymptotically matching this metric to
another one valid far from the hole. The tidally perturbed metric constructed
here could be useful in initial data constructions to describe the metric near
the horizons of a binary system of spinning holes. This perturbed metric could
also be used to construct waveforms and study the absorption of mass and
angular momentum by a Kerr black hole when external processes generate
gravitational radiation.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures. Final PRD version, minor typos, etc corrected.
v3: corrected typo in Eq. (35) and (57
Barbero-Immirzi field in canonical formalism of pure gravity
The Barbero-Immirzi (BI) parameter is promoted to a field and a canonical
analysis is performed when it is coupled with a Nieh-Yan topological invariant.
It is shown that, in the effective theory, the BI field is a canonical
pseudoscalar minimally coupled with gravity. This framework is argued to be
more natural than the one of the usual Holst action. Potential consequences in
relation with inflation and the quantum theory are briefly discussed.Comment: 10 page
Erratum: Extreme mass-ratio inspirals in the effective-one-body approach: Quasicircular, equatorial orbits around a spinning black hole [Phys. Rev. D 83, 044044 (2011)]
We construct effective-one-body waveform models suitable for data analysis with LISA for extreme-mass ratio inspirals in quasi-circular, equatorial orbits about a spinning supermassive black hole. The accuracy of our model is established through comparisons against frequency-domain, Teukolsky-based waveforms in the radiative approximation. The calibration of eight high-order post-Newtonian parameters in the energy flux suffices to obtain a phase and fractional amplitude agreement of better than 1 radian and 1 % respectively over a period between 2 and 6 months depending on the system considered. This agreement translates into matches higher than 97 % over a period between 4 and 9 months, depending on the system. Better agreements can be obtained if a larger number of calibration parameters are included. Higher-order mass ratio terms in the effective-one-body Hamiltonian and radiation-reaction introduce phase corrections of at most 30 radians in a one year evolution. These corrections are usually one order of magnitude larger than those introduced by the spin of the small object in a one year evolution. These results suggest that the effective-one-body approach for extreme mass ratio inspirals is a good compromise between accuracy and computational price for LISA data analysis purposes
Testing Alternative Theories of Gravity using LISA
We investigate the possible bounds which could be placed on alternative
theories of gravity using gravitational wave detection from inspiralling
compact binaries with the proposed LISA space interferometer. Specifically, we
estimate lower bounds on the coupling parameter \omega of scalar-tensor
theories of the Brans-Dicke type and on the Compton wavelength of the graviton
\lambda_g in hypothetical massive graviton theories. In these theories,
modifications of the gravitational radiation damping formulae or of the
propagation of the waves translate into a change in the phase evolution of the
observed gravitational waveform. We obtain the bounds through the technique of
matched filtering, employing the LISA Sensitivity Curve Generator (SCG),
available online. For a neutron star inspiralling into a 10^3 M_sun black hole
in the Virgo Cluster, in a two-year integration, we find a lower bound \omega >
3 * 10^5. For lower-mass black holes, the bound could be as large as 2 * 10^6.
The bound is independent of LISA arm length, but is inversely proportional to
the LISA position noise error. Lower bounds on the graviton Compton wavelength
ranging from 10^15 km to 5 * 10^16 km can be obtained from one-year
observations of massive binary black hole inspirals at cosmological distances
(3 Gpc), for masses ranging from 10^4 to 10^7 M_sun. For the highest-mass
systems (10^7 M_sun), the bound is proportional to (LISA arm length)^{1/2} and
to (LISA acceleration noise)^{-1/2}. For the others, the bound is independent
of these parameters because of the dominance of white-dwarf confusion noise in
the relevant part of the frequency spectrum. These bounds improve and extend
earlier work which used analytic formulae for the noise curves.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Classical & Quantum Gravit
Small molecule inhibitors of Late SV40 Factor (LSF) abrogate hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): evaluation using an endogenous HCC model
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a lethal malignancy with high mortality and poor prognosis. Oncogenic transcription factor Late SV40 Factor (LSF) plays an important role in promoting HCC. A small molecule inhibitor of LSF, Factor Quinolinone Inhibitor 1 (FQI1), significantly inhibited human HCC xenografts in nude mice without harming normal cells. Here we evaluated the efficacy of FQI1 and another inhibitor, FQI2, in inhibiting endogenous hepatocarcinogenesis. HCC was induced in a transgenic mouse with hepatocyte-specific overexpression of c-myc (Alb/c-myc) by injecting N-nitrosodiethylamine (DEN) followed by FQI1 or FQI2 treatment after tumor development. LSF inhibitors markedly decreased tumor burden in Alb/c-myc mice with a corresponding decrease in proliferation and angiogenesis. Interestingly, in vitro treatment of human HCC cells with LSF inhibitors resulted in mitotic arrest with an accompanying increase in CyclinB1. Inhibition of CyclinB1 induction by Cycloheximide or CDK1 activity by Roscovitine significantly prevented FQI-induced mitotic arrest. A significant induction of apoptosis was also observed upon treatment with FQI. These effects of LSF inhibition, mitotic arrest and induction of apoptosis by FQI1s provide multiple avenues by which these inhibitors eliminate HCC cells. LSF inhibitors might be highly potent and effective therapeutics for HCC either alone or in combination with currently existing therapies.The present study was supported in part by grants from The James S. McDonnell Foundation, National Cancer Institute Grant R01 CA138540-01A1 (DS), National Institutes of Health Grant R01 CA134721 (PBF), the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation (SWCRF) (DS and PBF), National Institutes of Health Grants R01 GM078240 and P50 GM67041 (SES), the Johnson and Johnson Clinical Innovation Award (UH), and the Boston University Ignition Award (UH). JLSW was supported by Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. DS is the Harrison Endowed Scholar in Cancer Research and Blick scholar. PBF holds the Thelma Newmeyer Corman Chair in Cancer Research. The authors acknowledge Dr. Lauren E. Brown (Dept. Chemistry, Boston University) for the synthesis of FQI1 and FQI2, and Lucy Flynn (Dept. Biology, Boston University) for initially identifying G2/M effects caused by FQI1. (James S. McDonnell Foundation; R01 CA138540-01A1 - National Cancer Institute; R01 CA134721 - National Institutes of Health; R01 GM078240 - National Institutes of Health; P50 GM67041 - National Institutes of Health; Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation (SWCRF); Johnson and Johnson Clinical Innovation Award; Boston University Ignition Award; Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc.)Published versio
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