2,102 research outputs found
Energy-Momentum Complex in M\o ller's Tetrad Theory of Gravitation
M\o ller's Tetrad Theory of Gravitation is examined with regard to the
energy-momentum complex. The energy-momentum complex as well as the
superpotential associated with M\o ller's theory are derived. M\o ller's field
equations are solved in the case of spherical symmetry. Two different
solutions, giving rise to the same metric, are obtained. The energy associated
with one solution is found to be twice the energy associated with the other.
Some suggestions to get out of this inconsistency are discussed at the end of
the paper.Comment: LaTeX2e with AMS-LaTeX 1.2, 13 page
The Effect of absorbing sites on the one-dimensional cellular automaton traffic flow with open boundaries
The effect of the absorbing sites with an absorbing rate , in both
one absorbing site (one way out) and two absorbing sites (two ways out) in a
road, on the traffic flow phase transition is investigated using numerical
simulations in the one-dimensional cellular automaton traffic flow model with
open boundaries using parallel dynamics.In the case of one way out, there exist
a critical position of the way out below which the current is
constant for and decreases when increasing
for . When the way out is located at a
position greater than , the current increases with for
and becomes constant for any value of
greater than . While, when the way out is located at any position
between and (), the current increases,
for , with and becomes constant for
and decreases with for
. In the later case the density undergoes two
successive first order transitions; from high density to maximal current phase
at and from intermediate density to the low one at
. In the case of two ways out located respectively
at the positions and , the two successive transitions occur
only when the distance - separating the two ways is smaller than
a critical distance . Phase diagrams in the (),
() and () planes are established. It is found
that the transitions between Free traffic, Congested traffic and maximal
current phase are first order
Influence of cellulose nanofibrils on the rheology, microstructure and strength of alkali activated ground granulated blast-furnace slag: a comparison with ordinary Portland cement
This paper reports on the effect of cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) on the fresh-state properties of alkali activated ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBS). Surface functionalized (oxidized) CNFs were added to alkali activated GGBS water suspensions (hydraulic pastes). The rheological behaviour of the pastes was compared with OPC and interpreted based on the CNF-mineral surface interaction, and on the CNF-water interaction and swelling. The water dispersion of CNFs with different surface functionalization degrees resulted in gels of different viscosity and yield stress, due to their different hydrophilicity and water adsorption properties. On increasing the CNFs surface oxidation degree, the viscosity of the CNF water dispersion decreases and the CNF water adsorption increases, while the viscosity of fresh pastes increases because of the reduced amount of available mixing water. In the hardened state, the hydraulic pastes show differences in mechanical strength related to the type and the amount of CNF influencing the porosity of the matrix as evidenced by the microstructural investigation performed by X-ray microtomography. The presence of higher amounts of CNFs induces the formation of porous agglomerates that may act as stress concentrators due to the swelling ability of nanofibrils
Inspiratory muscle warm-up does not improve cycling time-trial performance
Purpose: This study examined the effects of an active cycling warm-up, with and without the addition of an inspiratory muscle warm-up (IMW), on 10-km cycling time-trial performance
Effective theories of scattering with an attractive inverse-square potential and the three-body problem
A distorted-wave version of the renormalisation group is applied to
scattering by an inverse-square potential and to three-body systems. In
attractive three-body systems, the short-distance wave function satisfies a
Schroedinger equation with an attractive inverse-square potential, as shown by
Efimov. The resulting oscillatory behaviour controls the renormalisation of the
three-body interactions, with the renormalisation-group flow tending to a limit
cycle as the cut-off is lowered. The approach used here leads to single-valued
potentials with discontinuities as the bound states are cut off. The
perturbations around the cycle start with a marginal term whose effect is
simply to change the phase of the short-distance oscillations, or the
self-adjoint extension of the singular Hamiltonian. The full power counting in
terms of the energy and two-body scattering length is constructed for
short-range three-body forces.Comment: 19 pages (RevTeX), 2 figure
Free field realization of superstring theory on AdS3
The Coulomb gas representation of expectation values in SU(2) conformal field
theory developed by Dotsenko is extended to the SL(2,R) WZW model and applied
to bosonic string theory on AdS3 and to Type II superstrings on AdS3 x N. The
spectral flow symmetry is included in the free field realization of vertex
operators creating superstring states of both Ramond and Neveu-Schwarz sectors.
Conjugate representations for these operators are constructed and a background
charge prescription is designed to compute correlation functions. Two and three
point functions of bosonic and fermionic string states in arbitrary winding
sectors are calculated. Scattering amplitudes that violate winding number
conservation are also discussed.Comment: 40 pages, typos corrected, references added, minor changes in
presentation and details completed in the calculation of the R sector 2-point
function. Version to appear in JHE
Emotional persistence in online chatting communities
How do users behave in online chatrooms, where they instantaneously read and
write posts? We analyzed about 2.5 million posts covering various topics in
Internet relay channels, and found that user activity patterns follow known
power-law and stretched exponential distributions, indicating that online chat
activity is not different from other forms of communication. Analysing the
emotional expressions (positive, negative, neutral) of users, we revealed a
remarkable persistence both for individual users and channels. I.e. despite
their anonymity, users tend to follow social norms in repeated interactions in
online chats, which results in a specific emotional "tone" of the channels. We
provide an agent-based model of emotional interaction, which recovers
qualitatively both the activity patterns in chatrooms and the emotional
persistence of users and channels. While our assumptions about agent's
emotional expressions are rooted in psychology, the model allows to test
different hypothesis regarding their emotional impact in online communication.Comment: 34 pages, 4 main and 12 supplementary figure
Hydrodynamics of galactic dark matter
We consider simple hydrodynamical models of galactic dark matter in which the
galactic halo is a self-gravitating and self-interacting gas that dominates the
dynamics of the galaxy. Modeling this halo as a sphericaly symmetric and static
perfect fluid satisfying the field equations of General Relativity, visible
barionic matter can be treated as ``test particles'' in the geometry of this
field. We show that the assumption of an empirical ``universal rotation curve''
that fits a wide variety of galaxies is compatible, under suitable
approximations, with state variables characteristic of a non-relativistic
Maxwell-Boltzmann gas that becomes an isothermal sphere in the Newtonian limit.
Consistency criteria lead to a minimal bound for particle masses in the range
and to a constraint between the central
temperature and the particles mass. The allowed mass range includes popular
supersymmetric particle candidates, such as the neutralino, axino and
gravitino, as well as lighter particles ( keV) proposed by numerical
N-body simulations associated with self-interactive CDM and WDM structure
formation theories.Comment: LaTeX article style, 16 pages including three figures. Final version
to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Combined In Silico, In Vivo, and In Vitro Studies Shed Insights into the Acute Inflammatory Response in Middle-Aged Mice
We combined in silico, in vivo, and in vitro studies to gain insights into age-dependent changes in acute inflammation in response to bacterial endotoxin (LPS). Time-course cytokine, chemokine, and NO2-/NO3- data from "middle-aged" (6-8 months old) C57BL/6 mice were used to re-parameterize a mechanistic mathematical model of acute inflammation originally calibrated for "young" (2-3 months old) mice. These studies suggested that macrophages from middle-aged mice are more susceptible to cell death, as well as producing higher levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, vs. macrophages from young mice. In support of the in silico-derived hypotheses, resident peritoneal cells from endotoxemic middle-aged mice exhibited reduced viability and produced elevated levels of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10, and KC/CXCL1 as compared to cells from young mice. Our studies demonstrate the utility of a combined in silico, in vivo, and in vitro approach to the study of acute inflammation in shock states, and suggest hypotheses with regard to the changes in the cytokine milieu that accompany aging. © 2013 Namas et al
Head posture and dental wear evaluation of bruxist children with primary teeth
2 SUMMARY The aim of the present study was to compare the head position and the dental wear between bruxist and non-bruxist children with primary dentition. Methods: All the subjects had complete primary dentition, dental and skeletal class I occlusion and were classified as bruxist or non-bruxist according to their anxiety level, bruxism described by their parents and signs of temporomandibular disorders. The dental wear was drawn in dental casts and processed in digital format. Physiotherapeutic evaluation and a cephalometric radiograph with natural head position were also performed for each child to evaluate the cranio-cervical position for the bruxist (n = 33) and the control group (n = 20). The variables were compared between the two groups, using the Student t-test and Mann-Whitney U-test. Results: A more anterior and downward head tilt was found in the bruxist group, with statistically significant differences compared with the controls. More significant dental wear was observed for the bruxist children. Conclusions: Bruxism seems to be related to altered natural head posture and more intense dental wear. Further studies are necessary to explore bruxism mechanisms
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