288 research outputs found

    Multi-Lagrangians, Hereditary Operators and Lax Pairs for the Korteweg-de Vries Positive and Negative Hierarchies

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    We present an approach to the construction of action principles for differential equations, and apply it to field theory in order to construct systematically, for integrable equations which are based on a Nijenhuis (or hereditary) operator, a ladder of action principles which is complementary to the well-known multi-Hamiltonian formulation. We work out results for the Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) equation, which is a member of the positive hierarchy related to a hereditary operator. Three negative hierarchies of (negative) evolution equations are defined naturally from the hereditary operator as well, in the context of field theory. The Euler-Lagrange equations arising from the action principles are equivalent to the original evolution equation + deformations, which are obtained in terms of the positive and negative evolution vectors. We recognize the Liouville, Sinh-Gordon, Hunter-Zheng and Camassa-Holm equations as negative equations. The ladder for KdV is directly mappable to a ladder for any of these negative equations and other positive equations (e.g., the Harry-Dym and a special case of the Krichever-Novikov equations): a new nonlocal action principle for the deformed system Sinh-Gordon + spatial translation vector is presented. Several nonequivalent, nonlocal time-reparametrization invariant action principles for KdV are constructed. Hamiltonian and Symplectic operators are obtained in factorized form. Alternative Lax pairs for all negative flows are constructed, using the flows and the hereditary operator as only input. From this result we prove that all positive and negative equations in the hierarchies share the same sets of local and nonlocal constants of the motion for KdV, which are explicitly obtained using the local and nonlocal action principles for KdV.Comment: Final version, accepted in JMP; RevTeX, 31 page

    Test particles behavior in the framework of a lagrangian geometric theory with propagating torsion

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    Working in the lagrangian framework, we develop a geometric theory in vacuum with propagating torsion; the antisymmetric and trace parts of the torsion tensor, considered as derived from local potential fields, are taken and, using the minimal action principle, their field equations are calculated. Actually these will show themselves to be just equations for propagating waves giving torsion a behavior similar to that of metric which, as known, propagates through gravitational waves. Then we establish a principle of minimal substitution to derive test particles equation of motion, obtaining, as result, that they move along autoparallels. We then calculate the analogous of the geodesic deviation for these trajectories and analyze their behavior in the nonrelativistic limit, showing that the torsion trace potential Ď•\phi has a phenomenology which is indistinguishable from that of the gravitational newtonian field; in this way we also give a reason for why there have never been evidence for it.Comment: 12 pages, no figures, to appear on Int. Journ. Mod. Phys.

    Consistency of Semiclassical Gravity

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    We discuss some subtleties which arise in the semiclassical approximation to quantum gravity. We show that integrability conditions prevent the existence of Tomonaga-Schwinger time functions on the space of three-metrics but admit them on superspace. The concept of semiclassical time is carefully examined. We point out that central charges in the matter sector spoil the consistency of the semiclassical approximation unless the full quantum theory of gravity and matter is anomaly-free. We finally discuss consequences of these considerations for quantum field theory in flat spacetime, but with arbitrary foliations.Comment: 12 pages, LATEX, Report Freiburg THEP-94/2

    The Canonical Approach to Quantum Gravity: General Ideas and Geometrodynamics

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    We give an introduction to the canonical formalism of Einstein's theory of general relativity. This then serves as the starting point for one approach to quantum gravity called quantum geometrodynamics. The main features and applications of this approach are briefly summarized.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. Contribution to E. Seiler and I.-O. Stamatescu (editors): `Approaches To Fundamental Physics -- An Assessment Of Current Theoretical Ideas' (Springer Verlag, to appear

    Bohmian Mechanics and Quantum Information

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    Many recent results suggest that quantum theory is about information, and that quantum theory is best understood as arising from principles concerning information and information processing. At the same time, by far the simplest version of quantum mechanics, Bohmian mechanics, is concerned, not with information but with the behavior of an objective microscopic reality given by particles and their positions. What I would like to do here is to examine whether, and to what extent, the importance of information, observation, and the like in quantum theory can be understood from a Bohmian perspective. I would like to explore the hypothesis that the idea that information plays a special role in physics naturally emerges in a Bohmian universe.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure

    Torsion-induced spin precession

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    We investigate the motion of a spinning test particle in a spatially-flat FRW-type space-time in the framework of the Einstein-Cartan theory. The space-time has a torsion arising from a spinning fluid filling the space-time. We show that for spinning particles with nonzero transverse spin components, the torsion induces a precession of particle spin around the direction of the fluid spin. We also show that a charged spinning particle moving in a torsion-less spatially-flat FRW space-time in the presence of a uniform magnetic field undergoes a precession of a different character.Comment: latex, 4 eps figure

    What is the Geometry of Superspace ?

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    We investigate certain properties of the Wheeler-DeWitt metric (for constant lapse) in canonical General Relativity associated with its non-definite nature. Contribution to the conference on Mach's principle: "From Newtons Bucket to Quantum Gravity", July 26-30 1993, Tuebingen, GermanyComment: 10 pages, Plain Te

    Duality properties of Gorringe-Leach equations

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    In the category of motions preserving the angular momentum's direction, Gorringe and Leach exhibited two classes of differential equations having elliptical orbits. After enlarging slightly these classes, we show that they are related by a duality correspondence of the Arnold-Vassiliev type. The specific associated conserved quantities (Laplace-Runge-Lenz vector and Fradkin-Jauch-Hill tensor) are then dual reflections one of the othe
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