123 research outputs found
Spherically symmetric solutions of Einstein + non-polynomial gravities
We obtain the static spherically symmetric solutions of a class of
gravitational models whose additions to the General Relativity (GR) action
forbid Ricci-flat, in particular, Schwarzschild geometries. These theories are
selected to maintain the (first) derivative order of the Einstein equations in
Schwarzschild gauge. Generically, the solutions exhibit both horizons and a
singularity at the origin, except for one model that forbids spherical symmetry
altogether. Extensions to arbitrary dimension with a cosmological constant,
Maxwell source and Gauss-Bonnet terms are also considered.Comment: 6 pages, no figures, REVTeX
Gauss-Bonnet Gravity with Scalar Field in Four Dimensions
We give all exact solutions of the Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet Field Equations
coupled with a scalar field in four dimensions under certain assumptions.Comment: Latex file, 7 page
Exact solutions of Dirac equation on (1+1)-dimensional spacetime coupled to a static scalar field
We use a generalized scheme of supersymmetric quantum mechanics to obtain the
energy spectrum and wave function for Dirac equation in (1+1)-dimensional
spacetime coupled to a static scalar field.Comment: 7 pages, Late
Energy in Generic Higher Curvature Gravity Theories
We define and compute the energy of higher curvature gravity theories in
arbitrary dimensions. Generically, these theories admit constant curvature
vacua (even in the absence of an explicit cosmological constant), and
asymptotically constant curvature solutions with non-trivial energy properties.
For concreteness, we study quadratic curvature models in detail. Among them,
the one whose action is the square of the traceless Ricci tensor always has
zero energy, unlike conformal (Weyl) gravity. We also study the string-inspired
Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet model and show that both its flat and Anti-de-Sitter
vacua are stable.Comment: 18 pages, typos corrected, one footnote added, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
Black Hole Configurations with Total Entropy Less than A/4
If one surrounds a black hole with a perfectly reflecting shell and
adiabatically squeezes the shell inward, one can increase the black hole area A
to exceed four times the total entropy S, which stays fixed during the process.
A can be made to exceed 4S by a factor of order unity before the one enters the
Planck regime where the semiclassical approximation breaks down. One
interpretation is that the black hole entropy resides in its thermal
atmosphere, and the shell restricts the atmosphere so that its entropy is less
than A/4.Comment: 31 pages, LaTe
Solution to the ghost problem in fourth order derivative theories
We present a solution to the ghost problem in fourth order derivative
theories. In particular we study the Pais-Uhlenbeck fourth order oscillator
model, a model which serves as a prototype for theories which are based on
second plus fourth order derivative actions. Via a Dirac constraint method
quantization we construct the appropriate quantum-mechanical Hamiltonian and
Hilbert space for the system. We find that while the second-quantized Fock
space of the general Pais-Uhlenbeck model does indeed contain the negative norm
energy eigenstates which are characteristic of higher derivative theories, in
the limit in which we switch off the second order action, such ghost states are
found to move off shell, with the spectrum of asymptotic in and out S-matrix
states of the pure fourth order theory which results being found to be
completely devoid of states with either negative energy or negative norm. We
confirm these results by quantizing the Pais-Uhlenbeck theory via path
integration and by constructing the associated first-quantized wave mechanics,
and show that the disappearance of the would-be ghosts from the energy
eigenspectrum in the pure fourth order limit is required by a hidden symmetry
that the pure fourth order theory is unexpectedly found to possess. The
occurrence of on-shell ghosts is thus seen not to be a shortcoming of pure
fourth order theories per se, but rather to be one which only arises when
fourth and second order theories are coupled to each other.Comment: 36 pages, revtex. Prepared for the proceedings of the 2006 Biennial
Meeting of the International Association for Relativistic Dynamics Version 2
contains an expanded discussion of the path integral quantization of the
Pais-Uhlenbeck fourth order oscillator theor
Do static sources respond to massive scalar particles from the Hawking radiation as uniformly accelerated ones do in the inertial vacuum?
We revisit the recently found equivalence for the response of a static scalar
source interacting with a {\em massless} Klein-Gordon field when the source is
(i) static in Schwarzschild spacetime, in the Unruh vacuum associated with the
Hawking radiation and (ii) uniformly accelerated in Minkowski spacetime, in the
inertial vacuum, provided that the source's proper acceleration is the same in
both cases. It is shown that this equivalence is broken when the massless
Klein-Gordon field is replaced by a {\em massive} one.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Quantum Gravitational Bremsstrahlung, Massless versus Massive Gravity
The massive spin-2 quantum gauge theory previously developed is applied to
calculate gravitational bremsstrahlung. It is shown that this theory is unique
and free from defects. In particular, there is no strong coupling if the
graviton mass becomes small. The cross sections go over smoothly into the ones
of the massless theory in the limit of vanishing graviton mass. The massless
cross sections are calculated for the full tensor theory.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Instability of Extremal Relativistic Charged Spheres
With the question, ``Can relativistic charged spheres form extremal black
holes?" in mind, we investigate the properties of such spheres from a classical
point of view. The investigation is carried out numerically by integrating the
Oppenheimer-Volkov equation for relativistic charged fluid spheres and finding
interior Reissner-Nordstr\"om solutions for these objects. We consider both
constant density and adiabatic equations of state, as well as several possible
charge distributions, and examine stability by both a normal mode and an energy
analysis. In all cases, the stability limit for these spheres lies between the
extremal () limit and the black hole limit (). That is, we find
that charged spheres undergo gravitational collapse before they reach ,
suggesting that extremal Reissner-Nordtr\"om black holes produced by collapse
are ruled out. A general proof of this statement would support a strong form of
the cosmic censorship hypothesis, excluding not only stable naked
singularities, but stable extremal black holes. The numerical results also
indicate that although the interior mass-energy obeys the usual stability limit for the Schwarzschild interior solution, the gravitational
mass does not. Indeed, the stability limit approaches as .
In the Appendix we also argue that Hawking radiation will not lead to an
extremal Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole. All our results are consistent with
the third law of black hole dynamics, as currently understood
Quantum Stability of Accelerated Black Holes
We study quantum aspects of the accelerated black holes in some detail.
Explicitly shown is the fact that a uniform acceleration stabilizes certain
charged black holes against the well-known thermal evaporation. Furthermore, a
close inspection of the geometry reveals that this is possible only for
near-extremal black holes and that most nonextremal varieties continue to
evaporate with a modified spectrum under the acceleration. We also introduce a
two-dimensional toy model where the energy-momentum flow is easily obtained for
general accelerations, and find the behavior to be in accordance with the
four-dimensional results. After a brief comparison to the classical system of a
uniformly accelerated charge, we close by pointing out the importance of this
result in the WKB expansion of the black hole pair-creation rate.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages, 5 uuencoded figures (minor errors corrected, more
discussions on the case with black holes formed by gravitational collapse.
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