1,919 research outputs found
Wheat Transportation in Perspective
This publication discusses the history of the various types of transportation used to get wheat to market. The historic importance of railways in wheat transportation and railroad regulation, as well as the role of trucks and barges, is also explained
Computing the spectrum of black hole radiation in the presence of high frequency dispersion: an analytical approach
We present a method for computing the spectrum of black hole radiation of a
scalar field satisfying a wave equation with high frequency dispersion. The
method involves a combination of Laplace transform and WKB techniques for
finding approximate solutions to ordinary differential equations. The modified
wave equation is obtained by adding a higher order derivative term suppressed
by powers of a fundamental momentum scale to the ordinary wave equation.
Depending on the sign of this new term, high frequency modes propagate either
superluminally or subluminally. We show that the resulting spectrum of created
particles is thermal at the Hawking temperature, and further that the out-state
is a thermal state at the Hawking temperature, to leading order in , for
either modification.Comment: 26 pages, plain latex, 6 figures included using psfi
Large quantum gravity effects: Unexpected limitations of the classical theory
3-dimensional gravity coupled to Maxwell (or Klein-Gordon) fields is exactly
soluble under the assumption of axi-symmetry. The solution is used to probe
several quantum gravity issues. In particular, it is shown that the quantum
fluctuations in the geometry are large unless the number and frequency of
photons satisfy the inequality . Thus, even when
there is a single photon of Planckian frequency, the quantum uncertainties in
the metric are significant. Results hold also for a sector of the 4-dimensional
theory (consisting of Einstein Rosen gravitational waves).Comment: 8 pages, No figures, ReVTe
Holographic three-point functions of giant gravitons
Working within the AdS/CFT correspondence we calculate the three-point
function of two giant gravitons and one pointlike graviton using methods of
semiclassical string theory and considering both the case where the giant
gravitons wrap an S^3 in S^5 and the case where the giant gravitons wrap an S^3
in AdS_5. We likewise calculate the correlation function in N=4 SYM using two
Schur polynomials and a single trace chiral primary. We find that the gauge and
string theory results have structural similarities but do not match perfectly,
and interpret this in terms of the Schur polynomials' inability to interpolate
between dual giant and pointlike gravitons.Comment: 21 page
A paradox of syntactic priming: why response tendencies show priming for passives, and response latencies show priming for actives
Speakers tend to repeat syntactic structures across sentences, a phenomenon called syntactic priming. Although it has been suggested that repeating syntactic structures should result in speeded responses, previous research has focused on effects in response tendencies. We investigated syntactic priming effects simultaneously in response tendencies and response latencies for active and passive transitive sentences in a picture description task. In Experiment 1, there were priming effects in response tendencies for passives and in response latencies for actives. However, when participants' pre-existing preference for actives was altered in Experiment 2, syntactic priming occurred for both actives and passives in response tendencies as well as in response latencies. This is the first investigation of the effects of structure frequency on both response tendencies and latencies in syntactic priming. We discuss the implications of these data for current theories of syntactic processing
Effective Gauge Degrees of Freedom and the (Non)existence of the Glueball Superpotential
We propose an efficient way to obtain a correct Veneziano-Yankielowicz type
integration constant of the effective glueball superpotential
, even for massless theories. Applying our method, we
show some theories do not have such an effective glueball
superpotential, even though they have isolated vacua. In these cases,
typically.Comment: 17 pages, v2: Footnote added, typos corrected, v3: Reference adde
Fermionic microstates within Painlev\'e-Gullstrand black hole
We consider the quantum vacuum of fermionic field in the presence of a
black-hole background as a possible candidate for the stabilized black hole.
The stable vacuum state (as well as thermal equilibrium states with arbitrary
temperature) can exist if we use the Painlev\'e-Gullstrand description of the
black hole, and the superluminal dispersion of the particle spectrum at high
energy, which is introduced in the free-falling frame. Such choice is inspired
by the analogy between the quantum vacuum and the ground state of quantum
liquid, in which the event horizon for the low-energy fermionic quasiparticles
also can arise. The quantum vacuum is characterized by the Fermi surface, which
appears behind the event horizon. We do not consider the back reaction, and
thus there is no guarantee that the stable black hole exists. But if it does
exist, the Fermi surface behind the horizon would be the necessary attribute of
its vacuum state. We also consider exact discrete spectrum of fermions inside
the horizon which allows us to discuss the problem of fermion zero modes.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, 2 figure
Lattice deformation at the sub-micron scale: X-ray nanobeam measurements of elastic strain in electron shuttling devices
The lattice strain induced by metallic electrodes can impair the
functionality of advanced quantum devices operating with electron or hole
spins. Here we investigate the deformation induced by CMOS-manufactured
titanium nitride electrodes on the lattice of a buried, 10 nm-thick Si/SiGe
Quantum Well by means of nanobeam Scanning X-ray Diffraction Microscopy. We
were able to measure TiN electrode-induced local modulations of the strain
tensor components in the range of with ~60 nm lateral
resolution. We have evaluated that these strain fluctuations are reflected into
local modulations of the potential of the conduction band minimum larger than 2
meV, which is close to the orbital energy of an electrostatic quantum dot. We
observe that the sign of the strain modulations at a given depth of the quantum
well layer depends on the lateral dimensions of the electrodes. Since our work
explores the impact of device geometry on the strain-induced energy landscape,
it enables further optimization of the design of scaled CMOS-processed quantum
devices.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Complexity within an oil palm monoculture : The effects of habitat variability and rainfall on adult dragonfly (Odonata) communities
Recent expansion of oil palm agriculture has resulted in loss of forest habitat and forest‐dependent species. However, large numbers of species—particularly insects—can persist within plantations. This study focuses on Odonata (dragonflies and damselflies): a charismatic indicator taxon and a potentially valuable pest control agent. We surveyed adult Odonata populations biannually over three years within an industrial oil palm plantation in Sumatra, Indonesia. We assessed the effects of rainfall (including an El Niño Southern Oscillation‐associated drought), the role of roadside ditches, and the importance of understory vegetation on Odonata populations. To assess the impacts of vegetation, we took advantage of a long‐term vegetation management experiment that is part of the Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function in Tropical Agriculture (BEFTA) Programme. We found 41 Odonata species, and communities varied between plantation core and roadside edge microhabitats, and between seasons. Abundance was significantly related to rainfall levels four months before surveys, probably indicating the importance of high water levels in roadside ditches for successful larval development. We found no significant effect of the BEFTA understory vegetation treatments on Odonata abundance, and only limited effects on community composition, suggesting that local understory vegetation structure plays a relatively unimportant role in determining communities. Our findings highlight that there are large numbers of Odonata species present within oil palm plantations and suggest that their abundance could potentially be increased by maintaining or establishing waterbodies. As Odonata are predators, this could bring pest control benefits, in addition to enhancing biodiversity within intensive agricultural landscapes.publishedVersionPaid Open Acces
Correlators of Giant Gravitons from dual ABJ(M) Theory
We generalize the operators of ABJM theory, given by Schur polynomials, in
ABJ theory by computing the two point functions in the free field and at finite
limits. These polynomials are then identified with the states of
the dual gravity theory. Further, we compute correlators among giant gravitons
as well as between giant gravitons and ordinary gravitons through the
corresponding correlators of ABJ(M) theory. Finally, we consider a particular
non-trivial background produced by an operator with an -charge of
and find, in presence of this background, due to the contribution of
the non-planar corrections, the large expansion is replaced by
and respectively.Comment: Latex, 32+1 pages, 2 figures, journal versio
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