512 research outputs found

    Conformal Dynamics of 0-Branes

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    We investigate the dynamics of dilatonic D-dimensional 0-branes in the near-horizon regime. The theory is given in a twofold form: two-dimensional dilaton gravity and nonlinear sigma model. Using asymptotic symmetries, duality relations, and sigma model techniques we find that the theory has three conformal points which correspond to (a) the asymptotic (Anti-de Sitter) region of the two-dimensional spacetime, (b) the horizon of the black hole, and (c) the infinite limit of the coupling parameter. We show that the conformal symmetry is perturbatively preserved at one-loop, identify the corresponding conformal field theories, and calculate the associated central charges. Finally, we use the conformal field theories to explain the thermodynamical properties of the two-dimensional black holes.Comment: 22 pages, LaTex fil

    Minisuperspace Models in M-theory

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    We derive the full canonical formulation of the bosonic sector of 11-dimensional supergravity, and explicitly present the constraint algebra. We then compactify M-theory on a warped product of homogeneous spaces of constant curvature, and construct a minisuperspace of scale factors. First classical behaviour of the minisuperspace system is analysed, and then a quantum theory is constructed. It turns out that there similarities with the "pre-Big Bang" scenario in String Theory.Comment: 35 pages, 2 figures, added additional discussion of gauge fixing and self-adjointness of the Hamiltonian, added reference

    Resolution of Nearly Mass Degenerate Higgs Bosons and Production of Black Hole Systems of Known Mass at a Muon Collider

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    The direct s-channel coupling to Higgs bosons is 40000 times greater for muons than electrons; the coupling goes as mass squared. High precision scanning of the lighter h0h^0 and the higher mass H0H^0 and A0A^0 is thus possible with a muon collider. The H0H^0 and A0A^0 are expected to be nearly mass degenerate and to be CP even and odd, respectively. A muon collider could resolve the mass degeneracy and make CP measurements. The origin of CP violation in the K0K^{0} and B0B^{0} meson systems might lie in the the H0/A0H^0/A^0 Higgs bosons. If large extra dimensions exist, black holes with lifetimes of 1026\sim 10^{-26} seconds could be created and observed via Hawking radiation at the LHC. Unlike proton or electron colliders, muon colliders can produce black hole systems of known mass. This opens the possibilities of measuring quantum remnants, gravitons as missing energy, and scanning production turn on. Proton colliders are hampered by parton distributions and CLIC by beamstrahlung. The ILC lacks the energy reach.Comment: Latex, 5 pages, 2 figures, proceedings to the DPF 2004: Annual Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields of APS, 26 August-31 August 2004, Riverside, CA, US

    Nonmetricity and torsion induced by dilaton gravity in two dimension

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    We develop a theory in which there are couplings amongst Dirac spinor, dilaton and non-Riemannian gravity and explore the nature of connection-induced dilaton couplings to gravity and Dirac spinor when the theory is reformulated in terms of the Levi-Civita connection. After presenting some exact solutions without spinors, we investigate the minimal spinor couplings to the model and in conclusion we can not find any nontrivial dilaton couplings to spinor.Comment: Added references, Accepted for publication in GR

    Collider Production of TeV Scale Black Holes and Higher-Curvature Gravity

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    We examine how the production of TeV scale black holes at colliders is influenced by the presence of Lovelock higher-curvature terms in the action of models with large extra dimensions. Such terms are expected to arise on rather general grounds, e.g., from string theory and are often used in the literature to model modifications to the Einstein-Hilbert action arising from quantum and/or stringy corrections. While adding the invariant which is quadratic in the curvature leads to quantitative modifications in black hole properties, cubic and higher invariants are found to produce significant qualitative changes, e.g., classically stable black holes. We use these higher-order curvature terms to construct a toy model of the black hole production cross section threshold. For reasonable parameter values we demonstrate that detailed measurements of the properties of black holes at future colliders will be highly sensitive to the presence of the Lovelock higher-order curvature terms.Comment: 37 pages, 11 figures, references adde

    Competing PT potentials and re-entrant PT symmetric phase for a particle in a box

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    We investigate the effects of competition between two complex, PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetric potentials on the PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetric phase of a "particle in a box". These potentials, given by VZ(x)=iZsign(x)V_Z(x)=iZ\mathrm{sign}(x) and Vξ(x)=iξ[δ(xa)δ(x+a)]V_\xi(x)=i\xi[\delta(x-a)-\delta(x+a)], represent long-range and localized gain/loss regions respectively. We obtain the PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetric phase in the (Z,ξ)(Z,\xi) plane, and find that for locations ±a\pm a near the edge of the box, the PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetric phase is strengthened by additional losses to the loss region. We also predict that a broken PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetry will be restored by increasing the strength ξ\xi of the localized potential. By comparing the results for this problem and its lattice counterpart, we show that a robust PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetric phase in the continuum is consistent with the fragile phase on the lattice. Our results demonstrate that systems with multiple, PT\mathcal{PT}-symmetric potentials show unique, unexpected properties.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    TeV-Scale Black Hole Lifetimes in Extra-Dimensional Lovelock Gravity

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    We examine the mass loss rates and lifetimes of TeV-scale extra dimensional black holes (BH) in ADD-like models with Lovelock higher-curvature terms present in the action. In particular we focus on the predicted differences between the canonical and microcanonical ensemble statistical mechanics descriptions of the Hawking radiation that results in the decay of these BH. In even numbers of extra dimensions the employment of the microcanonical approach is shown to generally lead to a significant increase in the BH lifetime as in case of the Einstein-Hilbert action. For odd numbers of extra dimensions, stable BH remnants occur when employing either description provided the highest order allowed Lovelock invariant is present. However, in this case, the time dependence of the mass loss rates obtained employing the two approaches will be different. These effects are in principle measurable at future colliders.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figs; Refs. and discussion adde

    Quasinormal mode characterization of evaporating mini black holes

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    According to recent theoretical developments, it might be possible to produce mini black holes in the high energy experiments in the LHC at CERN. We propose here a model based on the nn-dimensional Vaidya metric in double null coordinates for these decaying black holes. The associated quasinormal modes are considered. It is shown that only in the very last instants of the evaporation process the stationary regime for the quasinormal modes is broken, implying specific power spectra for the perturbations around these mini black-holes. From scattered fields one could recover, in principle, the black hole parameters as well as the number of extra dimensions. The still mysterious final fate of such objects should not alter significantly our main conclusions.Comment: v4: 9 pages, 3 figures. Minor correction

    Entropic corrections to Newton's law

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    In this short letter we calculate separately the generalized uncertainty principle (GUP) and self gravitational corrections to the Newton's gravitational formula. We show that for a complete description of the GUP and self-gravity effects, both temperature and the entropy must be modified.Comment: 4 pages, Accepted for publication in "Physica Scripta",Title changed, Major revisio

    Quantum tunneling as a classical anomaly

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    Classical mechanics is a singular theory in that real-energy classical particles can never enter classically forbidden regions. However, if one regulates classical mechanics by allowing the energy E of a particle to be complex, the particle exhibits quantum-like behavior: Complex-energy classical particles can travel between classically allowed regions separated by potential barriers. When Im(E) -> 0, the classical tunneling probabilities persist. Hence, one can interpret quantum tunneling as an anomaly. A numerical comparison of complex classical tunneling probabilities with quantum tunneling probabilities leads to the conjecture that as ReE increases, complex classical tunneling probabilities approach the corresponding quantum probabilities. Thus, this work attempts to generalize the Bohr correspondence principle from classically allowed to classically forbidden regions.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
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