5,240 research outputs found
Rotating charged fluids: theorems and results for Weyl type systems
We perform a systematic study of rotating charged fluids, and extend several
well known theorems regarding static Weyl-type systems which were recently
compiled by Lemos and Zanchin [Phys. Rev. D 80, 024010 (2009)] to rotating and
axisymmetric systems. Static Weyl-type systems are composed by static charged
fluid configurations obeying the Newton-Maxwell or the Einstein-Maxwell systems
of equations in which the electric potential and the timelike metric
potential satisfy the Weyl hypothesis, i.e., .
In the present analysis, both the Newton-Maxwell and Einstein-Maxwell theories
that describe non-relativistic and relativistic systems, respectively, are used
to perform a detailed analysis of the general properties of rotating charged
fluids rotating charged dust as well as rotating charged fluids with pressure
in four-dimensional spacetimes. In comparison to the static (nonrotating)
systems, two additional potentials, a metric potential related to rotation and
an electromagnetic potential related to the magnetic field, come into play for
rotating systems. In each case, constraints between the fluid quantities and
the metric and electromagnetic potentials are identified in order to generalize
the theorems holding for static charged systems to rotating charged systems.
New theorems regarding equilibrium configurations with differential rotation in
both the Newtonian and the relativistic theories are stated and proved. For
rigidly rotating charged fluids in the Einstein-Maxwell theory, a new ansatz
involving the gradient of the metric potentials and the gradient of the
electromagnetic potentials is considered in order to prove new theorems. Such
an ansatz leads to new constraints between the fluid quantities and field
potentials, so implying new equations of state for the charged fluids
Resonant Leptogenesis in the Minimal B-L Extended Standard Model at TeV
We investigate the resonant leptogenesis scenario in the minimal B-L extended
standard model(SM) with the B-L symmetry breaking at the TeV scale. Through
detailed analysis of the Boltzmann equations, we show how much the resultant
baryon asymmetry via leptogenesis is enhanced or suppressed, depending on the
model parameters, in particular, the neutrino Dirac Yukawa couplings and the
TeV-scale Majorana masses of heavy degenerate neutrinos. In order to consider a
realistic case, we impose a simple ansatz for the model parameters and analyze
the neutrino oscillation parameters and the baryon asymmetry via leptogenesis
as a function of only a single CP-phase. We find that for a fixed CP-phase all
neutrino oscillation data and the observed baryon asymmetry of the present
universe can be simultaneously reproduced.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, version to be published in Phys. Rev.
The irreversibility of relativistic time-dilation
The fluctuation relations, which characterize irreversible processes in
Nature, are among the most important results in non-equilibrium physics. In
short, these relations say that it is exponentially unlikely for us to observe
a time-reversed process and, thus, establish the thermodynamic arrow of time
pointing from low to high entropy. On the other hand, fundamental physical
theories are invariant under time-reversal symmetry. Although in Newtonian and
quantum physics the emergence of irreversible processes, as well as fluctuation
relations, is relatively well understood, many problems arise when relativity
enters the game. In this work, by considering a specific class of spacetimes,
we explore the question of how the time-dilation effect enters into the
fluctuation relations. We conclude that a positive entropy production emerges
as a consequence of both the special relativistic and the gravitational
(enclosed in the equivalence principle) time-dilation effects.Comment: 7 page
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