345 research outputs found
Stability of Gravitational and Electromagnetic Geons
Recent work on gravitational geons is extended to examine the stability
properties of gravitational and electromagnetic geon constructs. All types of
geons must possess the property of regularity, self-consistency and
quasi-stability on a time-scale much longer than the period of the comprising
waves. Standard perturbation theory, modified to accommodate time-averaged
fields, is used to test the requirement of quasi-stability. It is found that
the modified perturbation theory results in an internal inconsistency. The
time-scale of evolution is found to be of the same order in magnitude as the
period of the comprising waves. This contradicts the requirement of slow
evolution. Thus not all of the requirements for the existence of
electromagnetic or gravitational geons are met though perturbation theory. From
this result it cannot be concluded that an electromagnetic or a gravitational
geon is a viable entity. The broader implications of the result are discussed
with particular reference to the problem of gravitational energy.Comment: 40 pages, 5 EPS figures, uses overcite.st
The sound motion controller: a distributed system for interactive music performance
We developed an interactive system for music performance, able to
control sound parameters in a responsive way with respect to the
user’s movements. This system is conceived as a mobile application,
provided with beat tracking and an expressive parameter modulation,
interacting with motion sensors and effector units, which are
connected to a music output, such as synthesizers or sound effects.
We describe the various types of usage of our system and our
achievements, aimed to increase the expression of music
performance and provide an aid to music interaction. The results
obtained outline a first level of integration and foresee future
cognitive and technological research related to it
Laser Interferometric Detectors of Gravitational Waves
A laser interferometric detector of gravitational waves is studied and a
complete solution (to first order in the metric perturbation) of the coupled
Einstein-Maxwell equations with appropriate boundary conditions for the light
beams is determined. The phase shift, the light deflection and the rotation of
the polarization axis induced by gravitational waves are computed. The results
are compared with previous literature, and are shown to hold also for detectors
which are large in comparison with the gravitational wavelength.Comment: 13 pages, LaTe
Gravitational Geons Revisited
A careful analysis of the gravitational geon solution found by Brill and
Hartle is made. The gravitational wave expansion they used is shown to be
consistent and to result in a gauge invariant wave equation. It also results in
a gauge invariant effective stress-energy tensor for the gravitational waves
provided that a generalized definition of a gauge transformation is used. To
leading order this gauge transformation is the same as the usual one for
gravitational waves. It is shown that the geon solution is a self-consistent
solution to Einstein's equations and that, to leading order, the equations
describing the geometry of the gravitational geon are identical to those
derived by Wheeler for the electromagnetic geon. An appendix provides an
existence proof for geon solutions to these equations.Comment: 18 pages, ReVTeX. To appear in Physical Review D. Significant changes
include more details in the derivations of certain key equations and the
addition of an appendix containing a proof of the existence of a geon
solution to the equations derived by Wheeler. Also a reference has been added
and various minor changes have been mad
Overcoming Limitations of the Trackpad for 3D Docking Operations
International audienceFrom notebook trackpads to mobile phones to tabletop surface computing, multitouch input surfaces have become one of the most dominant interfaces for human-computer interaction. Although these are clearly e ective for interaction with 2D graphical user interfaces, we suspect that they are not as well suited for interaction requiring greater degrees of freedom (DoF). Here, we consider the possibility of exploiting two such surfaces, one for each hand, as a means of a ording e cient control over higher dimensional tasks. We investigate performance on a 6 DoF task, comparing such a two-surface multitouch input device against the results obtained using a standard 2D mouse, a single multitouch surface, and a 6 DoF free-space device. Our results indicate that two multitouch surfaces signi cantly improve user performance compared to the mouse and to a single surface
Negative Pressure and Naked Singularities in Spherical Gravitational Collapse
Assuming the weak energy condition, we study the nature of the non-central
shell-focussing singularity which can form in the gravitational collapse of a
spherical compact object in classical general relativity. We show that if the
radial pressure is positive, the singularity is covered by a horizon. For
negative radial pressures, the singularity will be covered if the ratio of
pressure to the density is greater than -1/3 and naked if this ratio is .Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX Fil
A Time-Like Naked Singularity
We construct a class of spherically symmetric collapse models in which a
naked singularity may develop as the end state of collapse. The matter
distribution considered has negative radial and tangential pressures, but the
weak energy condition is obeyed throughout. The singularity forms at the center
of the collapsing cloud and continues to be visible for a finite time. The
duration of visibility depends on the nature of energy distribution. Hence the
causal structure of the resulting singularity depends on the nature of the mass
function chosen for the cloud. We present a general model in which the naked
singularity formed is timelike, neither pointlike nor null. Our work represents
a step toward clarifying the necessary conditions for the validity of the
Cosmic Censorship Conjecture.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex4, To appear in Physical Review
Nonlinear Gravitational Waves: Their Form and Effects
A gravitational wave must be nonlinear to be able to transport its own
source, that is, energy and momentum. A physical gravitational wave, therefore,
cannot be represented by a solution to a linear wave equation. Relying on this
property, the second-order solution describing such physical waves is obtained.
The effects they produce on free particles are found to consist of nonlinear
oscillations along the direction of propagation.Comment: 15 pages, no figures. v2: presentation changes aiming at clarifying
the text; matches published versio
The gravitational interaction of light: from weak to strong fields
An explanation is proposed for the fact that pp-waves superpose linearly when
they propagate parallely, while they interact nonlinearly, scatter and form
singularities or Cauchy horizons if they are antiparallel. Parallel pp-waves do
interact, but a generalized gravitoelectric force is exactly cancelled by a
gravitomagnetic force. In an analogy, the interaction of light beams in
linearized general relativity is also revisited and clarified, a new result is
obtained for photon to photon attraction, and a conjecture is proved. Given
equal energy density in the beams, the light-to-light attraction is twice the
matter-to-light attraction and four times the matter-to-matter attraction.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, no figures. To appear in General Relativity and
Gravitatio
Energy-Momentum of a regular MMaS-class black hole
We compute the energy and momentum of a regular black hole of type defined by
Mars, Martin-Prats, and Senovilla using the Einstein and Papapetrou definitions
for energy-momentum density. Some other definitions of energy-momentum density
are shown to give mutually contradictory and less reasonable results. Results
support the Cooperstock hypothesis.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, LaTex2e; made minor corrections (in content and
in references) at the behest of two anonymous referees. Paper to appear in
IJMP
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