2,203 research outputs found
Lattice Universes in 2+1-dimensional gravity
Lattice universes are spatially closed space-times of spherical topology in
the large, containing masses or black holes arranged in the symmetry of a
regular polygon or polytope. Exact solutions for such spacetimes are found in
2+1 dimensions for Einstein gravity with a non-positive cosmological constant.
By means of a mapping that preserves the essential nature of geodesics we
establish analogies between the flat and the negative curvature cases. This map
also allows treatment of point particles and black holes on a similar footing.Comment: 14 pages 7 figures, to appear in Festschrift for Vince Moncrief (CQG
The isolation of gravitational instantons: Flat tori V flat R^4
The role of topology in the perturbative solution of the Euclidean Einstein
equations about flat instantons is examined.Comment: 15 pages, ICN-UNAM 94-1
Black Holes and Wormholes in 2+1 Dimensions
A large variety of spacetimes---including the BTZ black holes---can be
obtained by identifying points in 2+1 dimensional anti-de Sitter space by means
of a discrete group of isometries. We consider all such spacetimes that can be
obtained under a restriction to time symmetric initial data and one asymptotic
region only. The resulting spacetimes are non-eternal black holes with
collapsing wormhole topologies. Our approach is geometrical, and we discuss in
detail: The allowed topologies, the shape of the event horizons, topological
censorship and trapped curves.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, 11 figure
Initial Data for General Relativity with Toroidal Conformal Symmetry
A new class of time-symmetric solutions to the initial value constraints of
vacuum General Relativity is introduced. These data are globally regular,
asymptotically flat (with possibly several asymptotic ends) and in general have
no isometries, but a group of conformal isometries. After
decomposing the Lichnerowicz conformal factor in a double Fourier series on the
group orbits, the solutions are given in terms of a countable family of
uncoupled ODEs on the orbit space.Comment: REVTEX, 9 pages, ESI Preprint 12
Phenylketonuria in South Africa - A report on the status quo
During the 1980s a pilot newborn screening programme for the early detection (and treatment) of amino acidopathies, especially phenylketonuria (PKU), was conducted by the Department of National Health and Population Development. The motivation for this pilot programme was the high priority accorded PKU screening in Europe and North America and the presumed similarly high incidence of this condition among South Africans of European origin. From a cohort of 59 600 newborns screened in the Pretoria area over a period of 8 consecutive years (1979 - 1986), only 1 case of PKU (and 1 of tyrosinaemia) was found. Statistically this result is compatible (Poisson distribution, 95% confidence interval) with a 'true' incidence of not more than 3/59 600 (or about 1/20000) newborns. It is concluded from this result and other relevant information that newborn screening for PKU and other amino acidopathies is not cost-effective and justifiable, especially against the background of prevailing demographic conditions and more pressing health priorities in South Africa. This particular screening programme was discontinued in 1986. The results and conclusions are presented here. for the record
Uniqueness of the asymptotic AdS3 geometry
We explicitly show that in (2+1) dimensions the general solution of the
Einstein equations with negative cosmological constant on a neigbourhood of
timelike spatial infinity can be obtained from BTZ metrics by coordinate
transformations corresponding geometrically to deformations of their spatial
infinity surface. Thus, whatever the topology and geometry of the bulk, the
metric on the timelike extremities is BTZ.Comment: LaTeX, 8 pages, no figures, version that will appear in Class. Quant.
Gra
On bare masses in time-symmetric initial-value solutions for two black holes
The Brill-Lindquist time-symmetric initial-value solution for two uncharged
black holes is rederived using the Hamiltonian constraint equation with Dirac
delta distributions as a source for the binary black-hole field. The bare
masses of the Brill-Lindquist black holes are introduced in a way which is
applied, after straightforward modification, to the Misner-Linquist binary
black-hole solution.Comment: LaTeX, 4 page
Asymptotic Behaviour of the Proper Length and Volume of the Schwarzschild Singularity
Though popular presentations give the Schwarzschild singularity as a point it
is known that it is spacelike and not timelike. Thus it has a "length" and is
not a "point". In fact, its length must necessarily be infinite. It has been
proved that the proper length of the Qadir-Wheeler suture model goes to
infinity [1], while its proper volume shrinks to zero, and the asymptotic
behaviour of the length and volume have been calculated. That model consists of
two Friedmann sections connected by a Schwarzschild "suture". The question
arises whether a similar analysis could provide the asymptotic behaviour of the
Schwarzschild black hole near the singularity. It is proved here that, unlike
the behaviour for the suture model, for the Schwarzschild essential singularity
and , where
is the mean extrinsic curvature, or the York time.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
The metaphysics of Machian frame-dragging
The paper investigates the kind of dependence relation that best portrays Machian frame-dragging in general relativity. The question is tricky because frame-dragging relates local inertial frames to distant distributions of matter in a time-independent way, thus establishing some sort of non-local link between the two. For this reason, a plain causal interpretation of frame-dragging faces huge challenges. The paper will shed light on the issue by using a generalized structural equation model analysis in terms of manipulationist counterfactuals recently applied in the context of metaphysical enquiry by Schaffer (2016) and Wilson (2017). The verdict of the analysis will be that frame-dragging is best understood in terms of a novel type of dependence relation that is half-way between causation and grounding
Evaluation of the synoptic and mesoscale predictive capabilities of a mesoscale atmospheric simulation system
The overall performance characteristics of a limited area, hydrostatic, fine (52 km) mesh, primitive equation, numerical weather prediction model are determined in anticipation of satellite data assimilations with the model. The synoptic and mesoscale predictive capabilities of version 2.0 of this model, the Mesoscale Atmospheric Simulation System (MASS 2.0), were evaluated. The two part study is based on a sample of approximately thirty 12h and 24h forecasts of atmospheric flow patterns during spring and early summer. The synoptic scale evaluation results benchmark the performance of MASS 2.0 against that of an operational, synoptic scale weather prediction model, the Limited area Fine Mesh (LFM). The large sample allows for the calculation of statistically significant measures of forecast accuracy and the determination of systematic model errors. The synoptic scale benchmark is required before unsmoothed mesoscale forecast fields can be seriously considered
- …