10,302 research outputs found
An efficient coding system for deep space probes with specific application to Pioneer missions
One-half rate convolutional encoding with sequential decoding for deep space probe telemetry links with application to Pioneer mission
On the Singularities of the Magnon S-matrix
We investigate the analytic structure of the magnon S-matrix in the
spin-chain description of planar SUSY Yang-Mills/ strings. Semiclassical analysis suggests that the exact S-matrix must
have a large family of poles near the real axis in momentum space. In this
article we show that these are double poles corresponding to the exchange of
pairs of BPS magnons. Their locations in the complex plane are uniquely fixed
by the known dispersion relation for the BPS particles. The locations precisely
agree with the recent conjecture for the matrix by Beisert, Hernandez,
Lopez, Eden and Staudacher (hep-th/0609044 and hep-th/0610251). These poles do
not signal the presence of new bound states. In fact, a certain non-BPS
localized classical solution, which was thought to give rise to new bound
states, can actually decay into a pair of BPS magnons.Comment: 40 pages, 14 figures; typos corrected, references adde
On Central Charges and Hamiltonians for 0-brane dynamics
We consider general properties of central charges of zero branes and
associated duality invariants, in view of their double role, on the bulk and on
the world volume (quantum-mechanical) theory. A detailed study of the BPS
condition for the mass spectrum arising from toroidal compactifications is
given for 1/2, 1/4 and 1/8 BPS states in any dimensions. As a byproduct, we
retreive the U-duality invariant conditions on the charge (zero mode) spectrum
and the orbit classification of BPS states preserving different fractions of
supersymmetry. The BPS condition for 0-branes in theories with 16
supersymmetries in any dimension is also discussed.Comment: 23 pages, latex fil
Fission Hindrance in hot 216Th: Evaporation Residue Measurements
The fusion evaporation-residue cross section for 32S+184W has been measured
at beam energies of E_beam = 165, 174, 185, 196, 205, 215, 225, 236, 246,and
257 MeV using the ATLAS Fragment Mass Analyzer. The data are compared with
Statistical Model calculations and it is found that a nuclear dissipation
strength, which increases with excitation energy, is required to reproduce the
excitation function. A comparison with previously published data show that the
dissipation strength depends strongly on the shell structure of the nuclear
system.Comment: 15 pages 9 figure
Proposal of a topological M(atrix) theory
Keeping in mind the several models of M(atrix) theory we attempt to
understand the possible structure of the topological M(atrix) theory
``underlying'' these approaches. In particular we are motivated by the issue
about the nature of the structure of the vacuum of the topological M(atrix)
theory and how this could be related to the vacuum of the electroweak theory.
In doing so we are led to a simple topological matrix model. Moreover it is
intuitively expected from the current understanding that the noncommutative
nature of ``spacetime'' and background independence should lead to a
topological Model. The main purpose of this note is to propose a simple
topological Matrix Model which bears relation to F and M theories. Suggestions
on the origin of the chemical potential term appearing in the matrix models are
given.Comment: 14 pages revte
Small world yields the most effective information spreading
Spreading dynamics of information and diseases are usually analyzed by using
a unified framework and analogous models. In this paper, we propose a model to
emphasize the essential difference between information spreading and epidemic
spreading, where the memory effects, the social reinforcement and the
non-redundancy of contacts are taken into account. Under certain conditions,
the information spreads faster and broader in regular networks than in random
networks, which to some extent supports the recent experimental observation of
spreading in online society [D. Centola, Science {\bf 329}, 1194 (2010)]. At
the same time, simulation result indicates that the random networks tend to be
favorable for effective spreading when the network size increases. This
challenges the validity of the above-mentioned experiment for large-scale
systems. More significantly, we show that the spreading effectiveness can be
sharply enhanced by introducing a little randomness into the regular structure,
namely the small-world networks yield the most effective information spreading.
Our work provides insights to the understanding of the role of local clustering
in information spreading.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, accepted by New J. Phy
Marine oils: Complex, confusing, confounded?
AbstractMarine oils gained prominence following the report that Greenland Inuits who consumed a high-fat diet rich in long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) also had low rates of cardiovascular disease. Marine n-3 PUFAs have since become a billion dollar industry, which will continue to grow based on current trends. However, recent systematic reviews question the health benefits of marine oil supplements, particularly in the prevention of cardiovascular disease. Marine oils constitute an extremely complex dietary intervention for a number of reasons: i) the many chemical compounds they contain; ii) the many biological processes affected by n-3 PUFAs; iii) their tendency to deteriorate and form potentially toxic primary and secondary oxidation products; and iv) inaccuracy in the labelling of consumer products. These complexities may confound the clinical literature, limiting the ability to make substantive conclusions for some key health outcomes. Thus, there is a pressing need for clinical trials using marine oils whose composition has been independently verified and demonstrated to be minimally oxidised. Without such data, it is premature to conclude that n-3 PUFA rich supplements are ineffective
Depth concentrations of deuterium ions implanted into some pure metals and alloys
Pure metals (Cu, Ti, Zr, V, Pd) and diluted Pd-alloys (Pd-Ag, Pd-Pt, Pd-Ru,
Pd-Rh) were implanted by 25 keV deuterium ions at fluences in the range
(1.2{\div}2.3)x1022 D+/m2. The post-treatment depth distributions of deuterium
ions were measured 10 days and three months after the implantation using
Elastic Recoil Detection Analysis (ERDA) and Rutherford Backscattering (RBS).
Comparison of the obtained results allowed to make conclusions about relative
stability of deuterium and hydrogen gases in pure metals and diluted Pd alloys.
Very high diffusion rates of implanted deuterium ions from V and Pd pure metals
and Pd alloys were observed. Small-angle X-ray scattering revealed formation of
nanosized defects in implanted corundum and titanium.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Increasing Incidence and Age at Diagnosis among Children with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus over a 20-Year Period in Auckland (New Zealand)
BACKGROUND: We aimed to evaluate the incidence of type 1 diabetes mellitus in children <15 years of age (yr) in the Auckland region (New Zealand) over 20 years (1990-2009). METHODS: We performed a retrospective review of all patients <15 yr diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, from an unselected complete regional cohort. RESULTS: There were 884 new cases of type 1 diabetes, and age at diagnosis rose from 7.6 yr in 1990/1 to 8.9 yr in 2008/9 (r(2) = 0.31, p = 0.009). There was a progressive increase in type 1 diabetes incidence among children <15 yr (p<0.0001), reaching 22.5 per 100,000 in 2009. However, the rise in incidence did not occur evenly among age groups, being 2.5-fold higher in older children (10-14 yr) than in the youngest group (0-4 yr). The incidence of new cases of type 1 diabetes was highest in New Zealand Europeans throughout the study period in all age groups (p<0.0001), but the rate of increase was similar in New Zealand Europeans and Non-Europeans. Type 1 diabetes incidence and average annual increase were similar in both sexes. There was no change in BMI SDS shortly after diagnosis, and no association between BMI SDS and age at diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: There has been a steady increase in type 1 diabetes incidence among children <15 yr in Auckland over 20 years. Contrary to other studies, age at diagnosis has increased and the greatest rise in incidence occurred in children 10-14 yr. There was little change in BMI SDS in this population, providing no support for the 'accelerator hypothesis'
Emergent Gravity from Noncommutative Spacetime
We showed before that self-dual electromagnetism in noncommutative (NC)
spacetime is equivalent to self-dual Einstein gravity. This result implies a
striking picture about gravity: Gravity can emerge from electromagnetism in NC
spacetime. Gravity is then a collective phenomenon emerging from gauge fields
living in fuzzy spacetime. We elucidate in some detail why electromagnetism in
NC spacetime should be a theory of gravity. In particular, we show that NC
electromagnetism is realized through the Darboux theorem as a diffeomorphism
symmetry G which is spontaneously broken to symplectomorphism H due to a
background symplectic two-form , giving rise to
NC spacetime. This leads to a natural speculation that the emergent gravity
from NC electromagnetism corresponds to a nonlinear realization G/H of the
diffeomorphism group, more generally its NC deformation. We also find some
evidences that the emergent gravity contains the structure of generalized
complex geometry and NC gravity. To illuminate the emergent gravity, we
illustrate how self-dual NC electromagnetism nicely fits with the twistor space
describing curved self-dual spacetime. We also discuss derivative corrections
of Seiberg-Witten map which give rise to higher order gravity.Comment: 50 pages; Cosmetic revision and updated reference
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