3,421 research outputs found
Non-minimally coupled multi-scalar black holes
We study the static, spherically symmetric black hole solutions for a
non-minimally coupled multi-scalar theory. We find numerical solutions for
values of the scalar fields when a certain constraint on the maximal charge is
satisfied. Beyond this constraint no black hole solutions exist. This
constraint therefore corresponds to extremal solutions, however, this does not
match the \kappa = 0 constraint which typically indicates extremal solutions in
other models. This implies that the set of extremal solutions have non-zero,
finite and varying surface gravity. These solutions also violate the no-hair
theorems for N>1 scalar fields and have previously been proven to be linearly
stable.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Uncertain Fiscal Consolidations
The paper explores the macroeconomic consequences of fiscal consolidations whose timing and composition are uncertain. Drawing on the evidence in Alesina and Ardagna (2010), we emphasize whether or not the fiscal consolidation is driven by tax rises or expenditure cuts. We find that the composition of the fiscal consolidation, its duration, the monetary policy stance, the level of government debt and expectations over the likelihood and composition of fiscal consolidations all matter in determining the extent to which a given consolidation is expansionary and/or successful in stabilizing government debt.
Differential approximation for Kelvin-wave turbulence
I present a nonlinear differential equation model (DAM) for the spectrum of
Kelvin waves on a thin vortex filament. This model preserves the original
scaling of the six-wave kinetic equation, its direct and inverse cascade
solutions, as well as the thermodynamic equilibrium spectra. Further, I extend
DAM to include the effect of sound radiation by Kelvin waves. I show that,
because of the phonon radiation, the turbulence spectrum ends at a maximum
frequency where
is the total energy injection rate, is the speed of sound and
is the quantum of circulation.Comment: Prepared of publication in JETP Letter
Screening and Anti-Screening Effects in J/psi Production on Nuclei
The nuclear effects in J/psi hadro- and electroproduction on nuclei are
considered in framework of reggeon approach. It is shown that screening regime
which holds for electroproduction at x_F > 0.7 and for hadroproduction at x_F >
-(0.3-0.4) is changed with anti-screening regime for smaller x_F values.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Small changes in wordin
Crossing the phantom divide with k-essence in brane-worlds
We study a flat 3-brane in presence of a linear field with nonzero
cosmological constant . In this model the crossing of the phantom
divide (PD) occurs when the -essence energy density becomes negative. We
show that in the high energy regime the effective equation of state has a
resemblance of a modified Chaplygin gas while in the low energy regime it
becomes linear. We find a scale factor that begins from a singularity and
evolves to a de Sitter stable stage while other solutions have a
super-accelerated regime and end with a big rip. We use the energy conditions
to show when the effective equation of state of the brane-universe crosses the
PD.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. The article was fully rewritten. References
added. Accepted for publication in MPLA (2010
Dark energy from scalar field with Gauss Bonnet and non-minimal kinetic coupling
We study a model of scalar field with a general non-minimal kinetic coupling
to itself and to the curvature, and additional coupling to the Gauss Bonnet
4-dimensional invariant. The model presents rich cosmological dynamics and some
of its solutions are analyzed. A variety of scalar fields and potentials giving
rise to power-law expansion have been found. The dynamical equation of state is
studied for two cases, with and without free kinetic term . In both cases
phenomenologically acceptable solutions have been found. Some solutions
describe essentially dark energy behavior, and and some solutions contain the
decelerated and accelerated phases.Comment: 21 page
Reconstructing a model of quintessential inflation
We present an explicit cosmological model where inflation and dark energy
both could arise from the dynamics of the same scalar field. We present our
discussion in the framework where the inflaton field attains a nearly
constant velocity (where
is the e-folding time) during inflation. We show that the model
with and can easily satisfy inflationary constraints,
including the spectral index of scalar fluctuations (),
tensor-to-scalar ratio () and also the bound imposed on
during the nucleosynthesis epoch (). In our
construction, the scalar field potential always scales proportionally to the
square of the Hubble expansion rate. One may thereby account for the two vastly
different energy scales associated with the Hubble parameters at early and late
epochs. The inflaton energy could also produce an observationally significant
effective dark energy at a late epoch without violating local gravity tests.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures; added refs, published versio
How strong is the evidence for accelerated expansion?
We test the present expansion of the universe using supernova type Ia data
without making any assumptions about the matter and energy content of the
universe or about the parameterization of the deceleration parameter. We assume
the cosmological principle to apply in a strict sense. The result strongly
depends on the data set, the light-curve fitting method and the calibration of
the absolute magnitude used for the test, indicating strong systematic errors.
Nevertheless, in a spatially flat universe there is at least a 5 sigma evidence
for acceleration which drops to 1.8 sigma in an open universe.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Stress corrosion in titanium alloys and other metallic materials
Multiple physical and chemical techniques including mass spectroscopy, atomic absorption spectroscopy, gas chromatography, electron microscopy, optical microscopy, electronic spectroscopy for chemical analysis (ESCA), infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), X-ray analysis, conductivity, and isotopic labeling were used in investigating the atomic interactions between organic environments and titanium and titanium oxide surfaces. Key anhydrous environments studied included alcohols, which contain hydrogen; carbon tetrachloride, which does not contain hydrogen; and mixtures of alcohols and halocarbons. Effects of dissolved salts in alcohols were also studied. This program emphasized experiments designed to delineate the conditions necessary rather than sufficient for initiation processes and for propagation processes in Ti SCC
UV stable, Lorentz-violating dark energy with transient phantom era
Phantom fields with negative kinetic energy are often plagued by the vacuum
quantum instability in the ultraviolet region. We present a Lorentz-violating
dark energy model free from this problem and show that the crossing of the
cosmological constant boundary w=-1 to the phantom equation of state is
realized before reaching a de Sitter attractor. Another interesting feature is
a peculiar time-dependence of the effective Newton's constant; the magnitude of
this effect is naturally small but may be close to experimental limits. We also
derive momentum scales of instabilities at which tachyons or ghosts appear in
the infrared region around the present Hubble scale and clarify the conditions
under which tachyonic instabilities do not spoil homogeneity of the
present/future Universe.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures; Presentation modified substantially, results and
conclusions unchanged. Journal versio
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