351 research outputs found

    Perturbative 3-charge microstate geometries in six dimensions

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    This work was supported in part by Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B) 24740159 from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).This work was supported in part by Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B) 24740159 from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).This work was supported in part by Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B) 24740159 from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)

    Codimension-2 solutions in five-dimensional supergravity

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    Article funded by SCOAP3Article funded by SCOAP3Article funded by SCOAP

    Non-Abelian supertubes

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    SCOAP

    Holographic Brownian motion and time scales in strongly coupled plasmas

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    Funded by SCOAP3Funded by SCOAP3Open Access funded by SCOAP³ - Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physic

    Moulting black holes

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    Smooth Horizonless Geometries Deep Inside the Black-Hole Regime

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    This Letter has been highlighted by the editors as an Editor's Suggestion.This Letter has been highlighted by the editors as an Editor's Suggestion

    Supercharging superstrata

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    We construct a new class of smooth horizonless microstate geometries of the supersymmetric D1-D5-P black hole in type IIB supergravity. We first work in the AdS 3 × S 3 decoupling limit and use the fermionic symmetries of the theory to generate new momentum carrying perturbations in the bulk that have an explicit CFT dual description. We then use the supergravity equations to calculate the backreaction of these perturbations and find the full non-linear solutions both in the asymptotically AdS and asymptotically flat case. These new geometries have a simpler structure than the previously known superstrata solutions

    Holographic Thermalization

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    Using the AdS/CFT correspondence, we probe the scale-dependence of thermalization in strongly coupled field theories following a quench, via calculations of two-point functions, Wilson loops and entanglement entropy in d=2,3,4. In the saddlepoint approximation these probes are computed in AdS space in terms of invariant geometric objects - geodesics, minimal surfaces and minimal volumes. Our calculations for two-dimensional field theories are analytical. In our strongly coupled setting, all probes in all dimensions share certain universal features in their thermalization: (1) a slight delay in the onset of thermalization, (2) an apparent non-analyticity at the endpoint of thermalization, (3) top-down thermalization where the UV thermalizes first. For homogeneous initial conditions the entanglement entropy thermalizes slowest, and sets a timescale for equilibration that saturates a causality bound over the range of scales studied. The growth rate of entanglement entropy density is nearly volume-independent for small volumes, but slows for larger volumes.Comment: 39 pages, 24 figure

    Non-Commutative Instantons and the Seiberg-Witten Map

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    We present several results concerning non-commutative instantons and the Seiberg-Witten map. Using a simple ansatz we find a large new class of instanton solutions in arbitrary even dimensional non-commutative Yang-Mills theory. These include the two dimensional ``shift operator'' solutions and the four dimensional Nekrasov-Schwarz instantons as special cases. We also study how the Seiberg-Witten map acts on these instanton solutions. The infinitesimal Seiberg-Witten map is shown to take a very simple form in operator language, and this result is used to give a commutative description of non-commutative instantons. The instanton is found to be singular in commutative variables.Comment: 26 pages, AMS-LaTeX. v2: the formula for the commutative description of the Nekrasov-Schwarz instanton corrected (sec. 4). v3: minor correction

    GEKKO/HIPER-driven shock waves and equation-of-state measurements at ultrahigh pressures

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    Copyright 2004 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Physics of Plasmas, 11(4), 1600-1608, 2004 and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.165084
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