147 research outputs found

    A Smart Voting Subsystem for Distributed Fault Tolerance

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems Laborator

    Chameleon: A Software Infrastructure and Testbed for Reliable High-Speed Networked Computing

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems LaboratoryNASA / NAG 1-61

    Performability Modeling Based on Real Data: A Case Study

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems LaboratoryNASA / NAG-1-613IBM CorporationJoint Services Electronics Program / N00014-84-C-0149Air Force Office of Scientific Research / AFOSR-84-013

    An Experimental Evaluation of the REE SIFT Environment for Spaceborne Applications

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems Laborator

    Fault-Tolerant Computing: An Overview

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems LaboratoryNASA / NAG-1-613Semiconductor Research Corporation / 90-DP-109Joint Services Electronics Program / N00014-90-J-127

    Incorporating Reconfigurability, Error Detection and Recovery into the Chameleon ARMOR Architecture

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems LaboratoryJet Propulsion Lab / NASA JPL 96134

    Asymptotic symmetries on Killing horizons

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    We investigate asymptotic symmetries regularly defined on spherically symmetric Killing horizons in the Einstein theory with or without the cosmological constant. Those asymptotic symmetries are described by asymptotic Killing vectors, along which the Lie derivatives of perturbed metrics vanish on a Killing horizon. We derive the general form of asymptotic Killing vectors and find that the group of the asymptotic symmetries consists of rigid O(3) rotations of a horizon two-sphere and supertranslations along the null direction on the horizon, which depend arbitrarily on the null coordinate as well as the angular coordinates. By introducing the notion of asymptotic Killing horizons, we also show that local properties of Killing horizons are preserved under not only diffeomorphisms but also non-trivial transformations generated by the asymptotic symmetry group. Although the asymptotic symmetry group contains the Diff(S1)\mathit{Diff}(S^1) subgroup, which results from the supertranslations dependent only on the null coordinate, it is shown that the Poisson bracket algebra of the conserved charges conjugate to asymptotic Killing vectors does not acquire non-trivial central charges. Finally, by considering extended symmetries, we discuss that unnatural reduction of the symmetry group is necessary in order to obtain the Virasoro algebra with non-trivial central charges, which will not be justified when we respect the spherical symmetry of Killing horizons.Comment: 28 page

    Logarithmic Corrections to Rotating Extremal Black Hole Entropy in Four and Five Dimensions

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    We compute logarithmic corrections to the entropy of rotating extremal black holes using quantum entropy function i.e. Euclidean quantum gravity approach. Our analysis includes five dimensional supersymmetric BMPV black holes in type IIB string theory on T^5 and K3 x S^1 as well as in the five dimensional CHL models, and also non-supersymmetric extremal Kerr black hole and slowly rotating extremal Kerr-Newmann black holes in four dimensions. For BMPV black holes our results are in perfect agreement with the microscopic results derived from string theory. In particular we reproduce correctly the dependence of the logarithmic corrections on the number of U(1) gauge fields in the theory, and on the angular momentum carried by the black hole in different scaling limits. We also explain the shortcomings of the Cardy limit in explaining the logarithmic corrections in the limit in which the (super)gravity description of these black holes becomes a valid approximation. For non-supersymmetric extremal black holes, e.g. for the extremal Kerr black hole in four dimensions, our result provides a stringent testing ground for any microscopic explanation of the black hole entropy, e.g. Kerr/CFT correspondence.Comment: LaTeX file, 50 pages; v2: added extensive discussion on the relation between boundary condition and choice of ensemble, modified analysis for slowly rotating black holes, all results remain unchanged, typos corrected; v3: minor additions and correction

    Logarithmic Corrections to N=2 Black Hole Entropy: An Infrared Window into the Microstates

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    Logarithmic corrections to the extremal black hole entropy can be computed purely in terms of the low energy data -- the spectrum of massless fields and their interaction. The demand of reproducing these corrections provides a strong constraint on any microscopic theory of quantum gravity that attempts to explain the black hole entropy. Using quantum entropy function formalism we compute logarithmic corrections to the entropy of half BPS black holes in N=2 supersymmetric string theories. Our results allow us to test various proposals for the measure in the OSV formula, and we find agreement with the measure proposed by Denef and Moore if we assume their result to be valid at weak topological string coupling. Our analysis also gives the logarithmic corrections to the entropy of extremal Reissner-Nordstrom black holes in ordinary Einstein-Maxwell theory.Comment: LaTeX file, 66 page

    Affine Gravity, Palatini Formalism and Charges

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    Affine gravity and the Palatini formalism contribute both to produce a simple and unique formula for calculating charges at spatial and null infinity for Lovelock type Lagrangians whose variational derivatives do not depend on second-order derivatives of the field components. The method is based on the covariant generalization due to Julia and Silva of the Regge-Teitelboim procedure that was used to define properly the mass in the classical formulation of Einstein's theory of gravity. Numerous applications reproduce standard results obtained by other secure but mostly specialized methods. As a novel application we calculate the Bondi energy loss in five dimensional gravity, based on the asymptotic solution given by Tanabe, Tanahashi and Shiromizu, and obtain, as expected, the same result. We also give the superpotential for Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity and find the superpotential for Lovelock theories of gravity when the number of dimensions tends to infinity with maximally symmetrical boundaries. The paper is written in standard component formalism.Comment: The work is dedicated to Joshua Goldberg from whom I learned and got interested in conservation laws in General Relativity (J.K
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