705 research outputs found

    Casimir Effect for the Piecewise Uniform String

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    The Casimir energy for the transverse oscillations of a piecewise uniform closed string is calculated. In its simplest version the string consists of two parts I and II having in general different tension and mass density, but is always obeying the condition that the velocity of sound is equal to the velocity of light. The model, first introduced by Brevik and Nielsen in 1990, possesses attractive formal properties implying that it becomes easily regularizable by several methods, the most powerful one being the contour integration method. We also consider the case where the string is divided into 2N pieces, of alternating type-I and type-II material. The free energy at finite temperature, as well as the Hagedorn temperature, are found. Finally, we make some remarks on the relationship between this kind of theory and the theory of quantum star graphs, recently considered by Fulling et al.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, Submitted to the volume "Cosmology, Quantum Vacuum, and Zeta Functions", in honour of Professor Emilio Elizalde on the occasion of his 60th birthda

    Casimir Effects Near the Big Rip Singularity in Viscous Cosmology

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    Analytical properties of the scalar expansion in the cosmic fluid are investigated, especially near the future singularity, when the fluid possesses a constant bulk viscosity \zeta. In addition, we assume that there is a Casimir-induced term in the fluid's energy-momentum tensor, in such a way that the Casimir contributions to the energy density and pressure are both proportional to 1/a^4, 'a' being the scale factor. A series expansion is worked out for the scalar expansion under the condition that the Casimir influence is small. Close to the Big Rip singularity the Casimir term has however to fade away and we obtain the same singular behavior for the scalar expansion, the scale factor, and the energy density, as in the Casimir-free viscous case.Comment: 7 pages RevTeX, no figures. Minor changes in discussion, some references added. To appear in Gen. Rel. Gra

    Casimir energy of a non-uniform string

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    The Casimir energy of a non-uniform string built up from two pieces with different speed of sound is calculated. A standard procedure of subtracting the energy of an infinite uniform string is applied, the subtraction being interpreted as the renormalization of the string tension. It is shown that in the case of a homogeneous string this method is completely equivalent to the zeta renormalization.Comment: 11 pages, REVTeX, no figures and table

    Thermodynamic Properties of the 2N-Piece Relativistic String

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    The thermodynamic free energy F(\beta) is calculated for a gas consisting of the transverse oscillations of a piecewise uniform bosonic string. The string consists of 2N parts of equal length, of alternating type I and type II material, and is relativistic in the sense that the velocity of sound everywhere equals the velocity of light. The present paper is a continuation of two earlier papers, one dealing with the Casimir energy of a 2N--piece string [I. Brevik and R. Sollie (1997)], and another dealing with the thermodynamic properties of a string divided into two (unequal) parts [I. Brevik, A. A. Bytsenko and H. B. Nielsen (1998)]. Making use of the Meinardus theorem we calculate the asymptotics of the level state density, and show that the critical temperatures in the individual parts are equal, for arbitrary spacetime dimension D. If D=26, we find \beta= (2/N)\sqrt{2\pi /T_{II}}, T_{II} being the tension in part II. Thermodynamic interactions of parts related to high genus g is also considered.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures. Discussion in section 8 expande

    Casimir energy of a dilute dielectric ball in the mode summation method

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    In the (ϵ1ϵ2)2(\epsilon_1-\epsilon_2)^2--approximation the Casimir energy of a dilute dielectric ball is derived using a simple and clear method of the mode summation. The addition theorem for the Bessel functions enables one to present in a closed form the sum over the angular momentum before the integration over the imaginary frequencies. The linear in (ϵ1ϵ2)(\epsilon_1-\epsilon_2) contribution into the vacuum energy is removed by an appropriate subtraction. The role of the contact terms used in other approaches to this problem is elucidated.Comment: 14 pages, REVTeX, no figures, no tables; presentation is made better, new references are adde

    Dark Energy and Viscous Cosmology

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    Singularities in the dark energy universe are discussed, assuming that there is a bulk viscosity in the cosmic fluid. In particular, it is shown how the physically natural assumption of letting the bulk viscosity be proportional to the scalar expansion in a spatially flat FRW universe can drive the fluid into the phantom region (w -1) in the non-viscous case.Comment: 11 pages. Printing error in eq.(23) corrected. To appear in Gen. Rel. Gra

    Cosmic Evolution and Primordial Black Hole Evaporation

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    A cosmological model in which primordial black holes (PBHs) are present in the cosmic fluid at some instant t=t_0 is investigated. The time t_0 is naturally identified with the end of the inflationary period. The PBHs are assumed to be nonrelativistic in the comoving fluid, to have the same mass, and may be subject to evaporation for t>t_0. Our present work is related to an earlier paper of Zimdahl and Pavon [Phys. Rev. D {\bf 58}, 103506 (1998)], but in contradistinction to these authors we assume that the (negative) production rate of the PBHs is zero. This assumption appears to us to be more simple and more physical. Consequences of the formalism are worked out. In particular, the four-divergence of the entropy four-vector in combination with the second law in thermodynamics show in a clear way how the the case of PBH evaporation corresponds to a production of entropy. Accretion of radiation onto the black holes is neglected. We consider both a model where two different sub-fluids interact, and a model involving one single fluid only. In the latter case an effective bulk viscosity naturally appears in the formalism.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, no figures. Extended discussion of the black hole evaporation process. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Randall-Sundrum Model in the Presence of a Brane Bulk Viscosity

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    The presence of a bulk viscosity for the cosmic fluid on a single Randall-Sundrum brane is considered. The spatial curvature is assumed to be zero. The five-dimensional Friedmann equation is derived, together with the energy conservation equation for the viscous fluid. These governing equations are solved for some special cases: (i) in the low-energy limit when the matter energy density is small compared with brane tension; (ii) for a matter-dominated universe, and (iii) for a radiation-dominated universe. Rough numerical estimates, for the extreme case when the universe is at its Planck time, indicate that the viscous effect can be significant.Comment: 18 pages, RevTeX4, no figures. Discussion in Sec. III expanded; new references. To appear in Phys. Rev.
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