312 research outputs found
Critical Phenomena in Gravitational Collapse: The Studies So Far
Studies of black hole formation from gravitational collapse have revealed
interesting non-linear phenomena at the threshold of black hole formation. In
particular, in 1993 Choptuik studied the collapse of a massless scalar field
with spherical symmetry and found some behaviour, which is quite similar to the
critical phenomena well-known in {\em Statistical Mechanics} and {\em Quantum
Field Theory}. Universality and echoing of the critical solution and power-law
scaling of the black hole masses have given rise to the name {\em Critical
Phenomena in Gravitational Collapse}. Choptuik's results were soon confirmed
both numerically and semi-analytically, and have extended to various other
matter fields.
In this paper, we shall give a brief introduction to this fascinating and
relatively new area, and provides an updated publication list. An analytical
"toy" model of critical collapse is presented, and some current investigations
are given.Comment: 5 figures, revtex. To appear in Braz. J. Phys. (2001
On Gauge Choice of Spherically Symmetric 3-Branes
Gauge choice for a spherically symmetric 3-brane embedded in a D-dimensional
bulk with arbitrary matter fields on and off the brane is studied. It is shown
that Israel's junction conditions across the brane restrict severely the
dependence of the matter fields on the spacetime coordinates. As examples, a
scalar field or a Yang-Mills potential can be only either time-dependent or
radial-coordinate dependent for the chosen gauge, while for a perfect fluid it
must be co-moving.Comment: Latex, final version to appear in Class. Quantum Gra
Energy conditions and current acceleration of the universe
The energy conditions provide a very promising model-independent study of the
current acceleration of the universe. However, in order to connect these
conditions with observations, one often needs first to integrate them, and then
find the corresponding constraints on some observational variables, such as the
distance modulus. Those integral forms can be misleading, and great caution is
needed when one interprets them physically. A typical example is that the
transition point of the deceleration parameter is at about in the CDM model. However, with the same model when we consider
the dimensionless Hubble parameter , which involves the integration of
, we find that does not cross the line of before . Therefore, to get the correct result, we cannot use the latter to determine
the transition point. With these in mind, we carefully study the constraints
from the energy conditions, and find that, among other things, the current
observational data indeed strongly indicate that our universe has ocne
experienced an accelerating expansion phase between the epoch of galaxy
formation and the present.Comment: revtex4, five figures. Corrected some typos and added new references.
Physics Letters B652, 63-68 (2007
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