723 research outputs found
Comparing Criteria for Circular Orbits in General Relativity
We study a simple analytic solution to Einstein's field equations describing
a thin spherical shell consisting of collisionless particles in circular orbit.
We then apply two independent criteria for the identification of circular
orbits, which have recently been used in the numerical construction of binary
black hole solutions, and find that both yield equivalent results. Our
calculation illustrates these two criteria in a particularly transparent
framework and provides further evidence that the deviations found in those
numerical binary black hole solutions are not caused by the different criteria
for circular orbits.Comment: 4 pages; to appear in PRD as a Brief Report; added and corrected
reference
Weisskopf-Wigner Decay Theory for the Energy-Driven Stochastic Schr\"odinger Equation
We generalize the Weisskopf-Wigner theory for the line shape and transition
rates of decaying states to the case of the energy-driven stochastic
Schr\"odinger equation that has been used as a phenomenology for state vector
reduction. Within the standard approximations used in the Weisskopf-Wigner
analysis, and assuming that the perturbing potential inducing the decay has
vanishing matrix elements within the degenerate manifold containing the
decaying state, the stochastic Schr\"odinger equation linearizes. Solving the
linearized equations, we find no change from the standard analysis in the line
shape or the transition rate per unit time. The only effect of the stochastic
terms is to alter the early time transient behavior of the decay, in a way that
eliminates the quantum Zeno effect. We apply our results to estimate
experimental bounds on the parameter governing the stochastic effects.Comment: 29 pages in RevTeX, Added Note, references adde
Hoop conjecture for colliding black holes : non-time-symmetric initial data
The hoop conjecture is well confirmed in momentarily static spaces, but it
has not been investigated systematically for the system with relativistic
motion. To confirm the hoop conjecture for non-time-symmetric initial data, we
consider the initial data of two colliding black holes with momentum and search
an apparent horizon that encloses two black holes. In testing the hoop
conjecture, we use two definitions of gravitational mass : one is the ADM mass
and the other is the quasi-local mass defined by Hawking. Although both
definitions of gravitational mass give fairly consistent picture of the hoop
conjecture, the hoop conjecture with the Hawking mass can judge the existence
of an apparent horizon for wider range of parameters of the initial data
compared to the ADM mass.Comment: 15pages, 4 figure
Gravitational waves from eccentric compact binaries: Reduction in signal-to-noise ratio due to nonoptimal signal processing
Inspiraling compact binaries have been identified as one of the most
promising sources of gravitational waves for interferometric detectors. Most of
these binaries are expected to have circularized by the time their
gravitational waves enter the instrument's frequency band. However, the
possibility that some of the binaries might still possess a significant
eccentricity is not excluded. We imagine a situation in which eccentric signals
are received by the detector but not explicitly searched for in the data
analysis, which uses exclusively circular waveforms as matched filters. We
ascertain the likelihood that these filters, though not optimal, will
nevertheless be successful at capturing the eccentric signals. We do this by
computing the loss in signal-to-noise ratio incurred when searching for
eccentric signals with those nonoptimal filters. We show that for a binary
system of a given total mass, this loss increases with increasing eccentricity.
We show also that for a given eccentricity, the loss decreases as the total
mass is increased.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, ReVTeX; minor changes made after referee's
comment
Quantum Anti-Zeno Effect
We demonstrate that near threshold decay processes may be accelerated by
repeated measurements. Examples include near threshold photodetachment of an
electron from a negative ion, and spontaneous emission in a cavity close to the
cutoff frequency, or in a photon band gap material.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Relativistic Hydrodynamic Evolutions with Black Hole Excision
We present a numerical code designed to study astrophysical phenomena
involving dynamical spacetimes containing black holes in the presence of
relativistic hydrodynamic matter. We present evolutions of the collapse of a
fluid star from the onset of collapse to the settling of the resulting black
hole to a final stationary state. In order to evolve stably after the black
hole forms, we excise a region inside the hole before a singularity is
encountered. This excision region is introduced after the appearance of an
apparent horizon, but while a significant amount of matter remains outside the
hole. We test our code by evolving accurately a vacuum Schwarzschild black
hole, a relativistic Bondi accretion flow onto a black hole, Oppenheimer-Snyder
dust collapse, and the collapse of nonrotating and rotating stars. These
systems are tracked reliably for hundreds of M following excision, where M is
the mass of the black hole. We perform these tests both in axisymmetry and in
full 3+1 dimensions. We then apply our code to study the effect of the stellar
spin parameter J/M^2 on the final outcome of gravitational collapse of rapidly
rotating n = 1 polytropes. We find that a black hole forms only if J/M^2<1, in
agreement with previous simulations. When J/M^2>1, the collapsing star forms a
torus which fragments into nonaxisymmetric clumps, capable of generating
appreciable ``splash'' gravitational radiation.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, submitted to PR
Far-infrared transmission studies of c-axis oriented superconducting MgB2 thin film
We reported far-infrared transmission measurements on a c-axis oriented
superconducting MgB thin film in the frequency range of 30 250
cm. We found that these measurements were sensitive to values of
scattering rate and superconducting gap . By fitting the
experimental transmission spectra at 40 K and below, we obtained
(700 1000) cm and 42 cm. These two
quantities suggested that MgB belong to the dirty limit.Comment: submitted at May
Choosing how to choose : Institutional pressures affecting the adoption of personnel selection procedures
The gap between science and practice in personnel selection is an ongoing concern of human resource management. This paper takes Oliver´s framework of organizations´ strategic responses to institutional pressures as a basis for outlining the diverse economic and social demands that facilitate or inhibit the application of scientifically recommended selection procedures. Faced with a complex network of multiple requirements, practitioners make more diverse choices in response to any of these pressures than has previously been acknowledged in the scientific literature. Implications for the science-practitioner gap are discussed
Post-Newtonian SPH calculations of binary neutron star coalescence. I. Method and first results
We present the first results from our Post-Newtonian (PN) Smoothed Particle
Hydrodynamics (SPH) code, which has been used to study the coalescence of
binary neutron star (NS) systems. The Lagrangian particle-based code
incorporates consistently all lowest-order (1PN) relativistic effects, as well
as gravitational radiation reaction, the lowest-order dissipative term in
general relativity. We test our code on sequences of single NS models of
varying compactness, and we discuss ways to make PN simulations more relevant
to realistic NS models. We also present a PN SPH relaxation procedure for
constructing equilibrium models of synchronized binaries, and we use these
equilibrium models as initial conditions for our dynamical calculations of
binary coalescence. Though unphysical, since tidal synchronization is not
expected in NS binaries, these initial conditions allow us to compare our PN
work with previous Newtonian results.
We compare calculations with and without 1PN effects, for NS with stiff
equations of state, modeled as polytropes with . We find that 1PN
effects can play a major role in the coalescence, accelerating the final
inspiral and causing a significant misalignment in the binary just prior to
final merging. In addition, the character of the gravitational wave signal is
altered dramatically, showing strong modulation of the exponentially decaying
waveform near the end of the merger. We also discuss briefly the implications
of our results for models of gamma-ray bursts at cosmological distances.Comment: RevTeX, 37 pages, 17 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. D, minor
corrections onl
Astrophysical structures from primordial quantum black holes
The characteristic sizes of astrophysical structures, up to the whole
observed Universe, can be recovered, in principle, assuming that gravity is the
overall interaction assembling systems starting from microscopic scales, whose
order of magnitude is ruled by the Planck length and the related Compton
wavelength. This result agrees with the absence of screening mechanisms for the
gravitational interaction and could be connected to the presence of Yukawa
corrections in the Newtonian potential which introduce typical interaction
lengths. This result directly comes out from quantization of primordial black
holes and then characteristic interaction lengths directly emerge from quantum
field theory.Comment: 11 page
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