7,233 research outputs found
On touching random surfaces, two-dimensional quantum gravity and non-critical string theory
A set of physical operators which are responsible for touching interactions
in the framework of c<1 unitary conformal matter coupled to 2D quantum gravity
is found. As a special case the non-critical bosonic strings are considered.
Some analogies with four dimensional quantum gravity are also discussed, e.g.
creation-annihilation operators for baby universes, Coleman mechanism for the
cosmological constant.Comment: 22 pages, Latex2e, 3 figure
Probing AdS/CFT correspondence via world-sheet methods and 2d gravity like scaling arguments
We show how some features of the AdS/CFT correspondence for AdS_3 can easily
be understood via standard world-sheet methods and 2d gravity like scaling
arguments. To do this, we propose a stringy way for perturbing two-dimensional
CFT's around their critical points. Our strategy is to start from a stringy
(world-sheet) representation of 2d CFT in space-time. Next we perturb a
world-sheet action by some marginal operators such that the space-time symmetry
becomes finite dimensional. As a result, we get a massive FT in space-time with
a scale provided by two-dimensional coupling constant. It turns out that there
exists a perturbation that leads to string theory on AdS_3. In this case the
scale is equivalently provided by the radial anti-de-Sitter coordinate.Comment: 15 pages; corrected some typo
Методы нейронных сетей и распознавания образов и их применение в экономике, технике и медицине
Functional integral approach to multipoint correlators in 2d critical systems
We extend a previously developed technique for computing spin-spin critical
correlators in the 2d Ising model, to the case of multiple correlations. This
enables us to derive Kadanoff-Ceva's formula in a simple and elegant way. We
also exploit a doubling procedure in order to evaluate the critical exponent of
the polarization operator in the Baxter model. Thus we provide a rigorous proof
of the relation between different exponents, in the path-integral framework.Comment: 10 pages, LaTex, no figure
On the Deconfinement Phase Transition in the Resonance Gas
We obtain the constraints on the ruling parameters of the dense hadronic gas
model at the critical temperature and propose the quasiuniversal ratios of the
thermodynamic quantities. The possible appearence of thermodynamical
instability in such a model is discussed.Comment: 7 pages, plain LaTeX, BI-TP 94/4
Modular Invariance of Finite Size Corrections and a Vortex Critical Phase
We analyze a continuous spin Gaussian model on a toroidal triangular lattice
with periods and where the spins carry a representation of the
fundamental group of the torus labeled by phases and . We find the
{\it exact finite size and lattice corrections}, to the partition function ,
for arbitrary mass and phases . Summing over phases gives
the corresponding result for the Ising model. The limits and
do not commute. With the model exhibits a {\it vortex
critical phase} when at least one of the is non-zero. In the continuum or
scaling limit, for arbitrary , the finite size corrections to are
{\it modular invariant} and for the critical phase are given by elliptic theta
functions. In the cylinder limit the ``cylinder charge''
is a non-monotonic function of that ranges from
for to zero for .Comment: 12 pages of Plain TeX with two postscript figure insertions called
torusfg1.ps and torusfg2.ps which can be obtained upon request from
[email protected]
AKSZ construction from reduction data
We discuss a general procedure to encode the reduction of the target space
geometry into AKSZ sigma models. This is done by considering the AKSZ
construction with target the BFV model for constrained graded symplectic
manifolds. We investigate the relation between this sigma model and the one
with the reduced structure. We also discuss several examples in dimension two
and three when the symmetries come from Lie group actions and systematically
recover models already proposed in the literature.Comment: 42 page
Hydrodynamic Equations in Quantum Hall Systems at Large Currents
Hydrodynamic equations (HDEQs) are derived which describe spatio-temporal
evolutions of the electron temperature and the chemical potential of
two-dimensional systems in strong magnetic fields in states with large diagonal
resistivity appearing at the breakdown of the quantum Hall effect. The
derivation is based on microscopic electronic processes consisting of drift
motions in a slowly-fluctuating potential and scattering processes due to
electron-electron and electron-phonon interactions. In contrast with the usual
HDEQs, one of the derived HDEQs has a term with an energy flux perpendicular to
the electric field due to the drift motions in the magnetic field. As an
illustration, the current distribution is calculated using the derived HDEQs.Comment: 10 pages, 2 Postscript figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
71 (2002) No.
Search For Companions Of Nearby Isolated Galaxies
The radial velocities are measured for 45 galaxies located in the
neighborhoods of 29 likely isolated galaxies in a new catalog. We find that
about 85% of these galaxies actually are well isolated objects. 4% of nearby
galaxies with V_LG<3500 km/s are this kind of cosmic "orphan".Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Emotions and Digital Well-being. The rationalistic bias of social media design in online deliberations
In this chapter we argue that emotions are mediated in an incomplete way in online social media because of the heavy reliance on textual messages which fosters a rationalistic bias and an inclination towards less nuanced emotional expressions. This incompleteness can happen either by obscuring emotions, showing less than the original intensity, misinterpreting emotions, or eliciting emotions without feedback and context. Online interactions and deliberations tend to contribute rather than overcome stalemates and informational bubbles, partially due to prevalence of anti-social emotions. It is tempting to see emotions as being the cause of the problem of online verbal aggression and bullying. However, we argue that social media are actually designed in a predominantly rationalistic way, because of the reliance on text-based communication, thereby filtering out social emotions and leaving space for easily expressed antisocial emotions. Based on research on emotions that sees these as key ingredients to moral interaction and deliberation, as well as on research on text-based versus non-verbal communication, we propose a richer understanding of emotions, requiring different designs of online deliberation platforms. We propose that such designs should move from text-centred designs and should find ways to incorporate the complete expression of the full range of human emotions so that these can play a constructive role in online deliberations
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