916 research outputs found
Lambda<0 Quantum Gravity in 2+1 Dimensions II: Black Hole Creation by Point Particles
Using the recently proposed formalism for Lambda<0 quantum gravity in 2+1
dimensions we study the process of black hole production in a collision of two
point particles. The creation probability for a BH with a simplest topology
inside the horizon is given by the Liouville theory 4-point function projected
on an intermediate state. We analyze in detail the semi-classical limit of
small AdS curvatures, in which the probability is dominated by the exponential
of the classical Liouville action. The probability is found to be exponentially
small. We then argue that the total probability of creating a horizon given by
the sum of probabilities of all possible internal topologies is of order unity,
so that there is no exponential suppression of the total production rate.Comment: v1: 30+1 pages, figures, v2: 34+1 pages, agruments straightened ou
Black Hole Thermodynamics and Riemann Surfaces
We use the analytic continuation procedure proposed in our earlier works to
study the thermodynamics of black holes in 2+1 dimensions. A general black hole
in 2+1 dimensions has g handles hidden behind h horizons. The result of the
analytic continuation is a hyperbolic 3-manifold having the topology of a
handlebody. The boundary of this handlebody is a compact Riemann surface of
genus G=2g+h-1. Conformal moduli of this surface encode in a simple way the
physical characteristics of the black hole. The moduli space of black holes of
a given type (g,h) is then the Schottky space at genus G. The (logarithm of
the) thermodynamic partition function of the hole is the Kaehler potential for
the Weil-Peterson metric on the Schottky space. Bekenstein bound on the black
hole entropy leads us to conjecture a new strong bound on this Kaehler
potential.Comment: 17+1 pages, 9 figure
Analytic Continuation for Asymptotically AdS 3D Gravity
We have previously proposed that asymptotically AdS 3D wormholes and black
holes can be analytically continued to the Euclidean signature. The analytic
continuation procedure was described for non-rotating spacetimes, for which a
plane t=0 of time symmetry exists. The resulting Euclidean manifolds turned out
to be handlebodies whose boundary is the Schottky double of the geometry of the
t=0 plane. In the present paper we generalize this analytic continuation map to
the case of rotating wormholes. The Euclidean manifolds we obtain are quotients
of the hyperbolic space by a certain quasi-Fuchsian group. The group is the
Fenchel-Nielsen deformation of the group of the non-rotating spacetime. The
angular velocity of an asymptotic region is shown to be related to the
Fenchel-Nielsen twist. This solves the problem of classification of rotating
black holes and wormholes in 2+1 dimensions: the spacetimes are parametrized by
the moduli of the boundary of the corresponding Euclidean spaces. We also
comment on the thermodynamics of the wormhole spacetimes.Comment: 28 pages, 14 figure
SO_0(1,d+1) Racah coefficients: Type I representations
We use AdS/CFT inspired methods to study the Racah coefficients for type I
representations of the Lorentz group SO_0(1,d+1) with d>1. For such
representations (a multiple of) the Racah coefficient can be represented as an
integral of a product of 6 bulk-to-bulk propagators over 4 copies of the
hyperbolic space H_{d+1}. To compute the integrals we represent the
bulk-to-bulk propagators in terms of bulk-to-boundary ones. The bulk integrals
can be computed explicitly, and the boundary integrations are carried out by
introducing Feynman parameters. The final result is an integral representation
of the Racah coefficient given by 4 Barnes-Mellin type integrals.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure. v2: Case d=1 corrected, case d>1 clarifie
Observation of superluminal geometrical resonances in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x intrinsic Josephson junctions
We study Fiske steps in small Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x mesa structures, containing
only few stacked intrinsic Josephson junctions. Careful alignment of magnetic
field prevents penetration of Abrikosov vortices and facilitates observation of
a large variety of high quality geometrical resonances, including superluminal
with velocities larger than the slowest velocity of electromagnetic waves. A
small number of junctions limits the number of resonant modes and allows
accurate identification of modes and velocities. It is shown that superluminal
geometrical resonances can be excited by subluminal fluxon motion and that
flux-flow itself becomes superluminal at high magnetic fields. We argue that
observation of high-quality superluminal geometrical resonances is crucial for
realization of the coherent flux-flow oscillator in the THz frequency range
Quantum Loop Representation for Fermions coupled to Einstein-Maxwell field
Quantization of the system comprising gravitational, fermionic and
electromagnetic fields is developed in the loop representation. As a result we
obtain a natural unified quantum theory. Gravitational field is treated in the
framework of Ashtekar formalism; fermions are described by two Grassmann-valued
fields. We define a -algebra of configurational variables whose
generators are associated with oriented loops and curves; ``open'' states --
curves -- are necessary to embrace the fermionic degrees of freedom. Quantum
representation space is constructed as a space of cylindrical functionals on
the spectrum of this -algebra. Choosing the basis of ``loop'' states we
describe the representation space as the space of oriented loops and curves;
then configurational and momentum loop variables become in this basis the
operators of creation and annihilation of loops and curves. The important
difference of the representation constructed from the loop representation of
pure gravity is that the momentum loop operators act in our case simply by
joining loops in the only compatible with their orientaiton way, while in the
case of pure gravity this action is more complicated.Comment: 28 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 15 uuencoded ps-figures. The construction of
the representation has been changed so that the representation space became
irreducible. One part is removed because it developed into a separate paper;
some corrections adde
3D Gravity, Point Particles and Liouville Theory
This paper elaborates on the bulk/boundary relation between negative
cosmological constant 3D gravity and Liouville field theory (LFT). We develop
an interpretation of LFT non-normalizable states in terms of particles moving
in the bulk. This interpretation is suggested by the fact that ``heavy'' vertex
operators of LFT create conical singularities and thus should correspond to
point particles moving inside AdS. We confirm this expectation by comparing the
(semi-classical approximation to the) LFT two-point function with the
(appropriately regularized) gravity action evaluated on the corresponding
metric.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, references adde
Transition to turbulence in Hunt's flow in a moderate magnetic field
Pressure-driven magnetohydrodynamic duct flow in a transverse uniform magnetic field is studied by direct numerical simulation. The electric boundary conditions correspond to Hunt's flow with perfectly insulating walls parallel to the magnetic field (sidewalls) and perfectly conducting walls perpendicular to the magnetic field (Hartmann walls). The velocity distribution exhibits strong jets at the sidewalls, which are susceptible to instability even at low Reynolds numbers Re. We explore the onset of time-dependent flow and transition to states with evolved turbulence for a moderate Hartmann number . At low Re time-dependence appears in the form of elongated Ting-Walker vortices at the sidewalls of the duct, which, upon increasing Re, develop into more complex structures with higher energy and then the sidewall jets partially detach from the walls. At high values of Re jet detachments disappear and the flow consists of two turbulent jets and nearly laminar core. It is also demonstrated that, there is a range of Re, where Hunt's flow exhibits a pronounced hysteresis behavior, so that different unsteady states can be observed for the same flow parameters. In this range multiple states may develop and co-exist, depending on the initial conditions
Feasibility of a Small, Rapid Optical-to-IR Response, Next Generation Gamma Ray Burst Mission
We present motivations for and study feasibility of a small, rapid optical to
IR response gamma ray burst (GRB) space observatory. By analyzing existing GRB
data, we give realistic detection rates for X-ray and optical/IR instruments of
modest size under actual flight conditions. Given new capabilities of fast
optical/IR response (about 1 s to target) and simultaneous multi-band imaging,
such an observatory can have a reasonable event rate, likely leading to new
science. Requiring a Swift-like orbit, duty cycle, and observing constraints, a
Swift-BAT scaled down to 190 square cm of detector area would still detect and
locate about 27 GRB per yr. for a trigger threshold of 6.5 sigma. About 23
percent of X-ray located GRB would be detected optically for a 10 cm diameter
instrument (about 6 per yr. for the 6.5 sigma X-ray trigger).Comment: Elaborated text version of a poster presented at 2012 Malaga/Marbella
symposiu
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