16,336 research outputs found
Dilaton Black Holes Near the Horizon
Generic 4-d black holes with unbroken supersymmetry are shown
to tend to a Robinson-Bertotti type geometry with a linear dilaton and doubling
of unbroken supersymmetries near the horizon. Purely magnetic dilatonic black
holes, which have unbroken supersymmetry, behave near the horizon as a
2-d linear dilaton vacuum . This geometry is invariant under 8
supersymmetries, i.e. half of the original supersymmetries are unbroken.
The supersymmetric positivity bound, which requires the mass of the 4-d dilaton
black holes to be greater than or equal to the central charge, corresponds to
positivity of mass for a class of stringy 2-d black holes.Comment: 10 pages, SU-ITP-92-2
The human, primate and rabbit ultraviolet action spectra
A 5000 watt xenon-mercury high pressure lamp was used to produce a continuous ultraviolet spectrum. Human and animal exposures were made to establish the photokeratitis threshold and abiotic action spectrum. The lower limit of the abiotic action spectrum was 220 nm while the upper limit was 310 nm. The radiant exposure threshold at 270 nm was 0.005 watts/sq cm for the rabbit, 0.004 watts/sq cm for the primate, and 0.004 watts/ sq cm for the human. The rabbit curve was bi-peaked with minimums at 220 nm, 240 nm and 270 nm. The primate curve was tri-peaked with minimums at 220 nm, 240 nm and 270 nm. The human data showed a rather shallow curve with a minimum at 270 nm. Formulas and calculations are given to predict minimum exposure times for ocular damage to man in outer space, to establish valid safety criteria, and to establish protective design criteria
Convection in the Earth's core driven by lateral variations in the core-mantle boundary heat flux
Moving core fluid maintains an isothermal core-mantle boundary (CMB), so lateral variations in the CMB heat flow result from mantle convection. Such variations will
drive thermal winds, even if the top of the core is stably stratified. These flows may contribute to the magnetic secular variation and are investigated here using a simple,
non-magnetic numerical model of the core. The results depend on the equatorial symmetry of the boundary heat flux variation. Large-scale equatorially symmetric
(ES) heat flux variations at the outer surface of a rapidly rotating spherical shell drive
deeply penetrating flows that are strongly suppressed in stratified fluid. Smaller-scale
ES heat flux variations drive flows less dominated by rotation and so less inhibited
by stratification. Equatorially anti-symmetric flux variations drive flows an order of
magnitude less energetic than those driven by ES patterns but, due to the nature of the Coriolis force, are less suppressed by stratification. The response of the rotating core fluid to a general CMB heat flow pattern will then depend strongly on the subadiabatic temperature profile. Imposing a lateral heat flux variation linearly related to a model of seismic tomography in the lowermost mantle drives flow in a density stratified fluid that
reproduces some features found in flows inverted from geomagnetic data
Shielding of Space Vehicles by Magnetic Fields
Spacecraft shielding by magnetic field
The DSI small satellite launcher
A new launcher has been developed by DSI, that is compatible with the GAS canisters. It has the proven capability to deploy a satellite from an orbiting Shuttle that is 18 inches in diameter, 31 inches long, and weighing 190 pounds. These DSI Launchers were used aboard the Discovery (STS-39) in May 1991 as part of the Infrared Background Signature Survey (IBSS) to deploy three small satellites known as Chemical Release Observation (CRO) satellites A, B, and C. Because the satellites contained hazardous liquids (MMH, UDMH, and MON-10) and were launched from GAS Cylinders without motorized doors, the launchers were required to pass NASA Shuttle Payload safety and verification requirements. Some of the more interesting components of the design were the V-band retention and separation mechanism, the separation springs, and the launcher electronics which provided a properly inhibited release sequence operated through the Small Payload Accommodations Switch Panel (SPASP) on board the Orbiter. The original plan for this launcher was to use a motorized door. The launcher electronics, therefore has the capability to be modified to accommodate the door, if desired
Kinematic dynamo action in a sphere. II. Symmetry selection
The magnetic fields of the planets are generated by dynamo action in their electrically conducting interiors. The Earth possesses an axial dipole magnetic field but other planets have other configurations: Uranus has an equatorial dipole for example. In a previous paper we explored a two-parameter class of flows, comprising convection rolls, differential rotation (D) and meridional circulation (M), for dynamo generation of steady fields with axial dipole symmetry by solving the kinematic dynamo equations. In this paper we explore generation of the remaining three allowed symmetries: axial quadrupole, equatorial dipole and equatorial quadrupole. The results have implications for the fully nonlinear dynamical dynamo because the flows qualitatively resemble those driven by thermal convection in a rotating sphere, and the symmetries define separable solutions of the nonlinear equations. Axial dipole solutions are generally preferred (they have lower critical magnetic Reynolds number) for D > 0, corresponding to westward surface drift. Axial quadrupoles are preferred for D 0), axial dipoles are preferred. The equatorial dipole must change sign between east and west hemispheres, and is not favoured by any elongation of the flux in longitude (caused by D) or polar concentrations (caused by M): they are preferred for small D and M. Polar and equatorial concentrations can be related to dynamo waves and the sign of Parker's dynamo number. For the three-dimensional flow considered here, the sign of the dynamo number is related to the sense of spiralling of the convection rolls, which must be the same as the surface drif
Vlasov moments, integrable systems and singular solutions
The Vlasov equation for the collisionless evolution of the single-particle
probability distribution function (PDF) is a well-known Lie-Poisson Hamiltonian
system. Remarkably, the operation of taking the moments of the Vlasov PDF
preserves the Lie-Poisson structure. The individual particle motions correspond
to singular solutions of the Vlasov equation. The paper focuses on singular
solutions of the problem of geodesic motion of the Vlasov moments. These
singular solutions recover geodesic motion of the individual particles.Comment: 16 pages, no figures. Submitted to Phys. Lett.
A No-go theorem for de Sitter compactifications?
A general framework for studying compactifications in supergravity and string
theories was introduced by Candelas, Horowitz, Strominger and Witten. This was
further generalised to take into account the warp factor by de Wit, Smit and
Hari Dass. Though the prime focus of the latter was to find solutions with
nontrivial warp factors (shown not to exist under a variety of circumstances),
it was shown there that de Sitter compactifications are generically
disfavoured. In this note we place these results in the context of a revived
interest in de Sitter spacetimes .Comment: 11 pages in LATEX. Contribution to the "First IUCAA meeting on the
Interface of Gravitational and Quantum Realms", Pune, Dec 2001. To appear in
Modern Physics Letters
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