3,376 research outputs found
Non-Singular Gravity Without Black Holes
A non-singular, static spherically symmetric solution to the nonsymmetric
gravitational and electromagnetic theory field equations is derived, which
depends on the four parameters m, l^2, Q and s, where m is the mass, Q is the
electric charge, l^2 is the NGT charge of a body and s is a dimensionless
constant. The electromagnetic field invariants are also singularity-free, so
that it is possible to construct regular particle-like solutions in the theory.
All the curvature invariants are finite, there are no null surfaces in the
spacetime and there are no black holes. A new stable, superdense object (SDO)
replaces black holes.Comment: 26 pages, UTPT-94-0
Comment on the formation of black holes in nonsymmetric gravity
We critically examine the claim made by Burko and Ori that black holes are
expected to form in nonsymmetric gravity and find their analysis to be
inconclusive. Their conclusion is a result of the approximations they make, and
not a consequence of the true dynamics of the theory. The approximation they
use fails to capture the crucial equivalence principle violations which enable
the full nonsymmetric field equations to detect and tame would-be horizons. An
examination of the dynamics of the full theory reveals no indication that black
holes should form. For these reasons, one cannot conclude from their analysis
that nonsymmetric gravity has black holes. A definitive answers awaits a
comprehensive study of gravitational collapse, using the full field equations.Comment: 6 pages, RevTe
Detecting Galactic Binaries with LISA
One of the main sources of gravitational waves for the LISA space-borne
interferometer are galactic binary systems. The waveforms for these sources are
represented by eight parameters, of which four are extrinsic, and four are
intrinsic to the system. Geometrically, these signals exist in an 8-d parameter
space. By calculating the metric tensor on this space, we calculate the number
of templates needed to search for such sources. We show in this study that
below a particular monochromatic frequency, we can ignore one of the intrinsic
parameters and search over a 7-d space. Beyond this frequency, we have a sudden
change in dimensionality of the parameter space from 7 to 8 dimensions, which
results in a change in the scaling of the growth of template number as a
function of monochromatic frequency.Comment: 7 pages-2 figures. One figure added and typos corrected. Accepted for
the proceedings of GWDAW 9, special edition of Classical and Quantum Gravit
A radiometer for stochastic gravitational waves
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration recently reported a new upper limit on an
isotropic stochastic background of gravitational waves obtained based on the
data from the 3rd LIGO science Run (S3). Now I present a new method for
obtaining directional upper limits that the LIGO Scientific Collaboration
intends to use for future LIGO science runs and that essentially implements a
gravitational wave radiometer.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Mapping the gravitational wave background
The gravitational wave sky is expected to have isolated bright sources
superimposed on a diffuse gravitational wave background. The background
radiation has two components: a confusion limited background from unresolved
astrophysical sources; and a cosmological component formed during the birth of
the universe. A map of the gravitational wave background can be made by
sweeping a gravitational wave detector across the sky. The detector output is a
complicated convolution of the sky luminosity distribution, the detector
response function and the scan pattern. Here we study the general
de-convolution problem, and show how LIGO (Laser Interferometric Gravitational
Observatory) and LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) can be used to
detect anisotropies in the gravitational wave background.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to CQ
Slice & Dice: Identifying and Removing Bright Galactic Binaries from LISA Data
Here we describe a hierarchal and iterative data analysis algorithm used for
searching, characterizing, and removing bright, monochromatic binaries from the
Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) data streams. The algorithm uses the
F-statistic to provide an initial solution for individual bright sources,
followed by an iterative least squares fitting for all the bright sources.
Using the above algorithm, referred to as Slice & Dice, we demonstrate the
removal of multiple, correlated galactic binaries from simulated LISA data.
Initial results indicate that Slice & Dice may be a useful tool for analyzing
the forthcoming LISA data.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, proceedings paper for the Sixth International
LISA Symposiu
A Non-singular Theory of Gravity
We present a geometrical gravitational theory which reduces to Einstein's
theory for weak gravitational potentials and which has a singularity-free
analog of the Schwarzschild metric.Comment: 8 pages, RevTeX, 3 figures included in compressed form, UTPT-94-0
Using the acoustic peak to measure cosmological parameters
Recent measurements of the cosmic microwave background radiation by the
Boomerang experiment indicate that the universe is spatially flat. Here some
simple back-of-the-envelope calculations are used to explain their result. The
main result is a simple formula for the angular scale of the acoustic peak in
terms of the standard cosmological parameters:
l=193*[1+3(1-Omega_0)/5+(1-h)/5+Omega_Lambda/35].Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, Explanations have been clarifie
Facing the LISA Data Analysis Challenge
By being the first observatory to survey the source rich low frequency region
of the gravitational wave spectrum, the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna
(LISA) will revolutionize our understanding of the Cosmos. For the first time
we will be able to detect the gravitational radiation from millions of galactic
binaries, the coalescence of two massive black holes, and the inspirals of
compact objects into massive black holes. The signals from multiple sources in
each class, and possibly others as well, will be simultaneously present in the
data. To achieve the enormous scientific return possible with LISA,
sophisticated data analysis techniques must be developed which can mine the
complex data in an effort to isolate and characterize individual signals. This
proceedings paper very briefly summarizes the challenges associated with
analyzing the LISA data, the current state of affairs, and the necessary next
steps to move forward in addressing the imminent challenges.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, Proceedings paper for the TeV Particle
Astrophysics II conference held Aug 28-31 at the Univ. of Wisconsi
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