275 research outputs found
Beyond connectedness: why pairwise metrics cannot capture community stability
The connectedness of species in a trophic web has long been a key structural characteristic for both theoreticians and empiricists in their understanding of community stability. In the past decades, there has been a shift from focussing on determining the number of interactions to taking into account their relative strengths. The question is: How do the strengths of the interactions determine the stability of a community? Recently, a metric has been proposed which compares the stability of observed communities in terms of the strength of three- and two-link feedback loops (cycles of interaction strengths). However, it has also been suggested that we do not need to go beyond the pairwise structure of interactions to capture stability. Here, we directly compare the performance of the feedback and pairwise metrics. Using observed food-web structures, we show that the pairwise metric does not work as a comparator of stability and is many orders of magnitude away from the actual stability values. We argue that metrics based on pairwise-strength information cannot capture the complex organization of strong and weak links in a community, which is essential for system stability
Physical nature of the central singularity in spherical collapse
We examine here the nature of the central singularity forming in the
spherically symmetric collapse of a dust cloud and it is shown that this is
always a strong curvature singularity where gravitational tidal forces diverge
powerfully. An important consequence is that the nature of the naked
singularity forming in the dust collapse turns out to be stable against the
perturbations in the initial data from which the collapse commences.Comment: Latex file, 11 pages, 2 figures, Updated version to match the
published version in PR
Strengths of singularities in spherical symmetry
Covariant equations characterizing the strength of a singularity in spherical
symmetry are derived and several models are investigated. The difference
between central and non-central singularities is emphasised. A slight
modification to the definition of singularity strength is suggested. The
gravitational weakness of shell crossing singularities in collapsing spherical
dust is proven for timelike geodesics, closing a gap in the proof.Comment: 16 pages, revtex. V2. Classification of irregular singular points
completed, Comments and references on singularities with a continuous metric
amende
Naked strong curvature singularities in Szekeres space-times
We investigate the occurrence and nature of naked singularities in the
Szekeres space-times. These space-times represent irrotational dust. They do
not have any Killing vectors and they are generalisations of the
Tolman-Bondi-Lemaitre space-times. It is shown that in these space-times there
exist naked singularities that satisfy both the limiting focusing condition and
the strong limiting focusing condition. The implications of this result for the
cosmic censorship hypothesis are discussed.Comment: latex, 9 page
Compact Three Dimensional Black Hole: Topology Change and Closed Timelike Curve (minor changes)
We present a compactified version of the 3-dimensional black hole recently
found by considering extra identifications and determine the analytical
continuation of the solution beyond its coordinate singularity by extending the
identifications to the extended region of the spacetime. In the extended region
of the spacetime, we find a topology change and non-trivial closed timelike
curves both in the ordinary 3-dimensional black hole and in the compactified
one. Especially, in the case of the compactified 3-dimensional black hole, we
show an example of topology change from one double torus to eight spheres with
three punctures.Comment: 20 pages revtex.sty 8 figures contained, TIT/HEP-245/COSMO-4
Quantum Radiation from Black Holes and Naked Singularities in Spherical Dust Collapse
A sufficiently massive collapsing star will end its life as a spacetime
singularity. The nature of the Hawking radiation emitted during collapse
depends critically on whether the star's boundary conditions are such as would
lead to the eventual formation of a black hole or, alternatively, to the
formation of a naked singularity. This latter possibility is not excluded by
the singularity theorems. We discuss the nature of the Hawking radiation
emitted in each case. We justify the use of Bogoliubov transforms in the
presence of a Cauchy horizon and show that if spacetime is assumed to terminate
at the Cauchy horizon, the resulting spectrum is thermal, but with a
temperature different from the Hawking temperature.Comment: PHYZZX macros, 27 pages, 3 figure
Non-radial null geodesics in spherical dust collapse
The issue of the local visibility of the shell-focussing singularity in
marginally bound spherical dust collapse is considered from the point of view
of the existence of future-directed null geodesics with angular momentum which
emanate from the singularity. The initial data (i.e. the initial density
profile) at the onset of collapse is taken to be of class . Simple
necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a naked singularity
are derived in terms of the data. It is shown that there exist future-directed
non-radial null geodesics emanating from the singularity if and only if there
exist future-directed radial null geodesics emanating from the singularity.
This result can be interpreted as indicating the robustness of previous results
on radial geodesics, with respect to the presence of angular momentum.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur
Information mobility in complex networks
The concept of information mobility in complex networks is introduced on the basis of a stochastic process taking place in the network. The transition matrix for this process represents the probability that the information arising at a given node is transferred to a target one. We use the fractional powers of this transition matrix to investigate the stochastic process at fractional time intervals. The mobility coefficient is then introduced on the basis of the trace of these fractional powers of the stochastic matrix. The fractional time at which a network diffuses 50% of the information contained in its nodes (1/ k50 ) is also introduced. We then show that the scale-free random networks display better spread of information than the non scale-free ones. We study 38 real-world networks and analyze their performance in spreading information from their nodes. We find that some real-world networks perform even better than the scale-free networks with the same average degree and we point out some of the structural parameters that make this possible
Nakedness and curvature strength of shell-focusing singularity in the spherically symmetric space-time with vanishing radial pressure
It was recently shown that the metric functions which describe a spherically
symmetric space-time with vanishing radial pressure can be explicitly
integrated. We investigate the nakedness and curvature strength of the
shell-focusing singularity in that space-time. If the singularity is naked, the
relation between the circumferential radius and the Misner-Sharp mass is given
by with along the first radial
null geodesic from the singularity. The is closely related to the
curvature strength of the naked singularity. For example, for the outgoing or
ingoing null geodesic, if the strong curvature condition (SCC) by Tipler holds,
then must be equal to 1. We define the ``gravity dominance condition''
(GDC) for a geodesic. If GDC is satisfied for the null geodesic, both SCC and
the limiting focusing condition (LFC) by Kr\'olak hold for and
, not SCC but only LFC holds for , and neither
holds for , for the null geodesic. On the other hand, if GDC is
satisfied for the timelike geodesic , both SCC and LFC are satisfied for
the timelike geodesic, irrespective of the value of . Several examples
are also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, Accepted for Publication in Classical and Quantum Gravity,
References Updated, Grammatical Errors Correcte
Energy dissipation in wave propagation in general relativistic plasma
Based on a recent communication by the present authors the question of energy
dissipation in magneto hydrodynamical waves in an inflating background in
general relativity is examined. It is found that the expanding background
introduces a sort of dragging force on the propagating wave such that unlike
the Newtonnian case energy gets dissipated as it progresses. This loss in
energy having no special relativistic analogue is, however, not mechanical in
nature as in elastic wave. It is also found that the energy loss is model
dependent and also depends on the number of dimensions.Comment: 12 page
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