5,670 research outputs found
Black-Hole Solutions with Scalar Hair in Einstein-Scalar-Gauss-Bonnet Theories
In the context of the Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet theory, with a general
coupling function between the scalar field and the quadratic Gauss-Bonnet term,
we investigate the existence of regular black-hole solutions with scalar hair.
Based on a previous theoretical analysis, that studied the evasion of the old
and novel no-hair theorems, we consider a variety of forms for the coupling
function (exponential, even and odd polynomial, inverse polynomial, and
logarithmic) that, in conjunction with the profile of the scalar field, satisfy
a basic constraint. Our numerical analysis then always leads to families of
regular, asymptotically-flat black-hole solutions with non-trivial scalar hair.
The solution for the scalar field and the profile of the corresponding
energy-momentum tensor, depending on the value of the coupling constant, may
exhibit a non-monotonic behaviour, an unusual feature that highlights the
limitations of the existing no-hair theorems. We also determine and study in
detail the scalar charge, horizon area and entropy of our solutions.Comment: PdfLatex file, 29 Pages, 18 figures, the analysis was extended to
study the scalar charge, horizon area and entropy of our solutions, comments
added, typos corrected, version to appear in Physical Review
A common origin of all the species of high-energy cosmic rays?
Cosmic ray nuclei, cosmic ray electrons with energy above a few GeV, and the
diffuse gamma-ray background radiation (GBR) above a few MeV, presumed to be
extragalactic, could all have their origin or residence in our galaxy and its
halo. The mechanism accelerating hadrons and electrons is the same, the
electron spectrum is modulated by inverse Compton scattering on starlight and
on the microwave background radiation; the -rays are the resulting
recoiling photons. The spectral indices of the cosmic-ray electrons and of the
GBR, calculated on this simple basis, agree with observations. The angular
dependence and the approximate magnitude of the GBR are also explained.Comment: Includes a discussion of the contribution of inverse Compton
scattering of CR electrons by starlight in the halo to the gamma background
radiation. One corrected typo. Additional references, and figures to compare
predictions for the angular dependence of the gamma background radiation with
data. Conclusions are unchange
The resonance spectrum of the cusp map in the space of analytic functions
We prove that the Frobenius--Perron operator of the cusp map
, (which is an approximation of the
Poincar\'e section of the Lorenz attractor) has no analytic eigenfunctions
corresponding to eigenvalues different from 0 and 1. We also prove that for any
the spectrum of in the Hardy space in the disk
\{z\in\C:|z-q|<1+q\} is the union of the segment and some finite or
countably infinite set of isolated eigenvalues of finite multiplicity.Comment: Submitted to JMP; The description of the spectrum in some Hardy
spaces is adde
- …