2,795 research outputs found
Barriers and Bridges: An Action Plan for Overcoming Obstacles and Unlocking Opportunities for African American Men in Pittsburgh
Among the region's residents, Pittsburgh's African American men have historically and disproportionately faced unprecedented barriers to economic opportunities. This study, supported by The Heinz Endowments, focuses on structural barriers that contribute to persistent racial disparities in the Pittsburgh region. Structural barriers are obstacles that collectively affect a group disproportionately and perpetuate or maintain stark disparities in outcomes. Structural barriers can be policies, practices, and other norms that favor an advantaged group while systematically disadvantaging a marginalized group. A community touched by racebased structural barriers can be identified by the racial and economic stratification of its residents; Pittsburgh, like many large cities in the United States, fits that description
Analysis of a method for precisely relating a seafloor point to a distant point on land
A study of the environmental constraints and engineering aspects of the acoustic portion of a system for making geodetic ties between undersea reference points and others on land is described. Important areas in which to make such observations initially would be from the California mainland out to oceanic points seaward of the San Andreas fault, and across the Aleutian Trench. The overall approach would be to operate a GPS receiver in a relative positioning (interferometric) mode to provide the long range element of the baseline determination (10 to 1,000 km) and an array of precision sea floor acoustic transponders to link the locally moving sea surface GPS antenna location to a fixed sea floor point. Analyses of various environmental constrants (tides, waves, currents, sound velocity variations) lead to the conclusion that, if one uses a properly designed transponder having a remotely controllable precise retransmission time delay, and is careful with regard to methods for installing these on the sea floor, one should, in many ocean locations, be able to achieve sub-decimeter overall system accuracy. Achievements of cm accuracy or better will require additional understanding of time and space scales of variation of sound velocity structure in the ocean at relevant locations
Gauge dependence of effective action and renormalization group functions in effective gauge theories
The Caswell-Wilczek analysis on the gauge dependence of the effective action
and the renormalization group functions in Yang-Mills theories is generalized
to generic, possibly power counting non renormalizable gauge theories. It is
shown that the physical coupling constants of the classical theory can be
redefined by gauge parameter dependent contributions of higher orders in
in such a way that the effective action depends trivially on the gauge
parameters, while suitably defined physical beta functions do not depend on
those parameters.Comment: 13 pages Latex file, additional comments in section
Method and system for measuring sound velocity
A method and system for determining the speed of sound in a fluidic medium by determining the travel time of an acoustical signal a predetermined distance in a fluidic medium by generating a cyclical reference signal of a predetermined frequency and transmitting a portion of the reference signal through the medium. The transmitted portion of the reference signal is received after travelling a predetermined distance in the fluidic medium. The cycles of the cyclical reference signal are counted during the period of time between the transmitting and receiving of the portion of the reference signal wherein the travel time of the portion of the reference signal, is the number of cycle counts divided by the frequency. The speed of the acoustical signal through the fluidic medium is a function of the path length divided by the travel time
Approach to a rational rotation number in a piecewise isometric system
We study a parametric family of piecewise rotations of the torus, in the
limit in which the rotation number approaches the rational value 1/4. There is
a region of positive measure where the discontinuity set becomes dense in the
limit; we prove that in this region the area occupied by stable periodic orbits
remains positive. The main device is the construction of an induced map on a
domain with vanishing measure; this map is the product of two involutions, and
each involution preserves all its atoms. Dynamically, the composition of these
involutions represents linking together two sector maps; this dynamical system
features an orderly array of stable periodic orbits having a smooth parameter
dependence, plus irregular contributions which become negligible in the limit.Comment: LaTeX, 57 pages with 13 figure
Higher-order non-symmetric counterterms in pure Yang-Mills theory
We analyze the restoration of the Slavnov-Taylor (ST) identities for pure
massless Yang-Mills theory in the Landau gauge within the BPHZL renormalization
scheme with IR regulator. We obtain the most general form of the action-like
part of the symmetric regularized action, obeying the relevant ST identities
and all other relevant symmetries of the model, to all orders in the loop
expansion. We also give a cohomological characterization of the fulfillment of
BPHZL IR power-counting criterion, guaranteeing the existence of the limit
where the IR regulator goes to zero. The technique analyzed in this paper is
needed in the study of the restoration of the ST identities for those models,
like the MSSM, where massless particles are present and no invariant
regularization scheme is known to preserve the full set of ST identities of the
theory.Comment: Final version published in the journa
Interacting fermions and domain wall defects in 2+1 dimensions
We consider a Dirac field in 2+1 dimensions with a domain wall like defect in
its mass, minimally coupled to a dynamical Abelian vector field. The mass of
the fermionic field is assumed to have just one linear domain wall, which is
externally fixed and unaffected by the dynamics. We show that, under some
general conditions on the parameters, the localized zero modes predicted by the
Callan and Harvey mechanism are stable under the electromagnetic interaction of
the fermions
Geometric representation of interval exchange maps over algebraic number fields
We consider the restriction of interval exchange transformations to algebraic
number fields, which leads to maps on lattices. We characterize
renormalizability arithmetically, and study its relationships with a
geometrical quantity that we call the drift vector. We exhibit some examples of
renormalizable interval exchange maps with zero and non-zero drift vector, and
carry out some investigations of their properties. In particular, we look for
evidence of the finite decomposition property: each lattice is the union of
finitely many orbits.Comment: 34 pages, 8 postscript figure
Explicit Bosonization of the Massive Thirring Model in 3+1 Dimensions
We bosonize the Massive Thirring Model in 3+1D for small coupling constant
and arbitrary mass. The bosonized action is explicitly obtained both in terms
of a Kalb-Ramond tensor field as well as in terms of a dual vector field. An
exact bosonization formula for the current is derived. The small and large mass
limits of the bosonized theory are examined in both the direct and dual forms.
We finally obtain the exact bosonization of the free fermion with an arbitrary
mass.Comment: Latex, 7 page
Quantum Conserved Currents in Affine Toda Theories
We study the renormalization and conservation at the quantum level of
higher-spin currents in affine Toda theories with particular emphasis on the
nonsimply-laced cases. For specific examples, namely the spin-3 current for the
and theories, we prove conservation to all-loop order,
thus establishing the existence of factorized S-matrices. For these theories,
as well as the simply-laced theory, we compute one-loop corrections
to the corresponding higher-spin charges and study charge conservation for the
three-particle vertex function. For the theory we show that
although the current is conserved, anomalous threshold singularities spoil the
conservation of the corresponding charge for the on-shell vertex function,
implying a breakdown of some of the bootstrap procedures commonly used in
determining the exact S-matrix.Comment: 19 page
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