67 research outputs found
Unsharp Degrees of Freedom and the Generating of Symmetries
In quantum theory, real degrees of freedom are usually described by operators
which are self-adjoint. There are, however, exceptions to the rule. This is
because, in infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces, an operator is not necessarily
self-adjoint even if its expectation values are real. Instead, the operator may
be merely symmetric. Such operators are not diagonalizable - and as a
consequence they describe real degrees of freedom which display a form of
"unsharpness" or "fuzzyness". For example, there are indications that this type
of operators could arise with the description of space-time at the string or at
the Planck scale, where some form of unsharpness or fuzzyness has long been
conjectured.
A priori, however, a potential problem with merely symmetric operators is the
fact that, unlike self-adjoint operators, they do not generate unitaries - at
least not straightforwardly. Here, we show for a large class of these operators
that they do generate unitaries in a well defined way, and that these operators
even generate the entire unitary group of the Hilbert space. This shows that
merely symmetric operators, in addition to describing unsharp physical
entities, may indeed also play a r{\^o}le in the generation of symmetries, e.g.
within a fundamental theory of quantum gravity.Comment: 23 pages, LaTe
On Fields with Finite Information Density
The existence of a natural ultraviolet cutoff at the Planck scale is widely
expected. In a previous Letter, it has been proposed to model this cutoff as an
information density bound by utilizing suitably generalized methods from the
mathematical theory of communication. Here, we prove the mathematical
conjectures that were made in this Letter.Comment: 31 pages, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Lorentz-covariant deformed algebra with minimal length
The -dimensional two-parameter deformed algebra with minimal length
introduced by Kempf is generalized to a Lorentz-covariant algebra describing a
()-dimensional quantized space-time. For D=3, it includes Snyder algebra
as a special case. The deformed Poincar\'e transformations leaving the algebra
invariant are identified. Uncertainty relations are studied. In the case of D=1
and one nonvanishing parameter, the bound-state energy spectrum and
wavefunctions of the Dirac oscillator are exactly obtained.Comment: 8 pages, no figure, presented at XV International Colloquium on
Integrable Systems and Quantum Symmetries (ISQS-15), Prague, June 15-17, 200
Quantum Theory of Noncommutative Fields
Generalizing the noncommutative harmonic oscillator construction, we propose
a new extension of quantum field theory based on the concept of "noncommutative
fields". Our description permits to break the usual particle-antiparticle
degeneracy at the dispersion relation level and introduces naturally an
ultraviolet and an infrared cutoff. Phenomenological bounds for these new
energy scales are given.Comment: LaTeX file, JHEP3.cls, subequations.sty; 12 pages, no figures. Final
version published in JHEP with some references adde
Short Distance vs. Long Distance Physics: The Classical Limit of the Minimal Length Uncertainty Relation
We continue our investigation of the phenomenological implications of the
"deformed" commutation relations [x_i,p_j]=i hbar[(1 + beta p^2) delta_{ij} +
beta' p_i p_j]. These commutation relations are motivated by the fact that they
lead to the minimal length uncertainty relation which appears in perturbative
string theory. In this paper, we consider the effects of the deformation on the
classical orbits of particles in a central force potential. Comparison with
observation places severe constraints on the value of the minimum length.Comment: 20 pages REVTEX4, 4 color eps figures, typos correcte
Generalized Uncertainty Principle, Modified Dispersion Relations and Early Universe Thermodynamics
In this paper, we study the effects of Generalized Uncertainty Principle(GUP)
and Modified Dispersion Relations(MDRs) on the thermodynamics of
ultra-relativistic particles in early universe. We show that limitations
imposed by GUP and particle horizon on the measurement processes, lead to
certain modifications of early universe thermodynamics.Comment: 21 Pages, 3 eps Figure, Revised Versio
Transdimensional physics and inflation
Within the framework of a five-dimensional brane world with a stabilized
radion, we compute the cosmological perturbations generated during inflation
and show that the perturbations are a powerful tool to probe the physics of
extra dimensions. While we find that the power spectrum of scalar perturbations
is unchanged, we show that the existence of the fifth dimension is imprinted on
the spectrum of gravitational waves generated during inflation. In particular,
we find that the tensor perturbations receive a correction proportional to
, where is the Hubble expansion rate during inflation and is
the size of the extra dimension. We also generalize our findings to the case of
several extra dimensions as well as to warped geometries.Comment: RevTeX file, 30 pages, 1 figure. Final version to appear in PR
Primeval Corrections to the CMB Anisotropies
We show that deviations of the quantum state of the inflaton from the thermal
vacuum of inflation may leave an imprint in the CMB anisotropies. The quantum
dynamics of the inflaton in such a state produces corrections to the
inflationary fluctuations, which may be observable. Because these effects
originate from IR physics below the Planck scale, they will dominate over any
trans-Planckian imprints in any theory which obeys decoupling. Inflation sweeps
away these initial deviations and forces its quantum state closer to the
thermal vacuum. We view this as the quantum version of the cosmic no-hair
theorem. Such imprints in the CMB may be a useful, independent test of the
duration of inflation, or of significant features in the inflaton potential
about 60 e-folds before inflation ended, instead of an unlikely discovery of
the signatures of quantum gravity. The absence of any such substructure would
suggest that inflation lasted uninterrupted much longer than
e-folds.Comment: 17 pages, latex, no figures; v3: added references and comments, final
version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Hawking Temperature in Taub-NUT (A)dS spaces via the Generalized Uncertainty Principle
Using the extended forms of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle from string
theory and the quantum gravity theory, we drived Hawking temperature of a
Taub-Nut-(A)dS black hole. In spite of their distinctive natures such as
asymptotically locally flat and breakdown of the area theorem of the horizon
for the black holes, we show that the corrections to Hawking temperature by the
generalized versions of the the Heisenberg uncertainty principle increases like
the Schwarzschild-(A)dS black hole and give the reason why the Taub-Nut-(A)dS
metric may have AdS/CFT dual picture.Comment: version published in General Relativity and Gravitatio
Superimposed Oscillations in the WMAP Data?
The possibility that the cosmic variance outliers present in the recently
released WMAP multipole moments are due to oscillations in the primordial power
spectrum is investigated. Since the most important contribution to the WMAP
likelihood originates from the outliers at relatively small angular scale
(around the first Doppler peak), special attention is paid to these in contrast
with previous studies on the subject which have concentrated on the large
scales outliers only (i.e. the quadrupole and octupole). As a physically
motivated example, the case where the oscillations are of trans-Planckian
origin is considered. It is shown that the presence of the oscillations causes
an important drop in the WMAP chi square of about fifteen. The F-test reveals
that such a drop has a probability less than 0.06% to occur by chance and can
therefore be considered as statistically significant.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, uses RevTex 4, references added, matches
published versio
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