20,686 research outputs found
Classical String in Curved Backgrounds
The Mathisson-Papapetrou method is originally used for derivation of the
particle world line equation from the covariant conservation of its
stress-energy tensor. We generalize this method to extended objects, such as a
string. Without specifying the type of matter the string is made of, we obtain
both the equations of motion and boundary conditions of the string. The world
sheet equations turn out to be more general than the familiar minimal surface
equations. In particular, they depend on the internal structure of the string.
The relevant cases are classified by examining canonical forms of the effective
2-dimensional stress-energy tensor. The case of homogeneously distributed
matter with the tension that equals its mass density is shown to define the
familiar Nambu-Goto dynamics. The other three cases include physically relevant
massive and massless strings, and unphysical tahyonic strings.Comment: 12 pages, REVTeX 4. Added a note and one referenc
Spinning branes in Riemann-Cartan spacetime
We use the conservation law of the stress-energy and spin tensors to study
the motion of massive brane-like objects in Riemann-Cartan geometry. The
world-sheet equations and boundary conditions are obtained in a manifestly
covariant form. In the particle case, the resultant world-line equations turn
out to exhibit a novel spin-curvature coupling. In particular, the spin of a
zero-size particle does not couple to the background curvature. In the string
case, the world-sheet dynamics is studied for some special choices of spin and
torsion. As a result, the known coupling to the Kalb-Ramond antisymmetric
external field is obtained. Geometrically, the Kalb-Ramond field has been
recognized as a part of the torsion itself, rather than the torsion potential
Self-forces on extended bodies in electrodynamics
In this paper, we study the bulk motion of a classical extended charge in
flat spacetime. A formalism developed by W. G. Dixon is used to determine how
the details of such a particle's internal structure influence its equations of
motion. We place essentially no restrictions (other than boundedness) on the
shape of the charge, and allow for inhomogeneity, internal currents,
elasticity, and spin. Even if the angular momentum remains small, many such
systems are found to be affected by large self-interaction effects beyond the
standard Lorentz-Dirac force. These are particularly significant if the
particle's charge density fails to be much greater than its 3-current density
(or vice versa) in the center-of-mass frame. Additional terms also arise in the
equations of motion if the dipole moment is too large, and when the
`center-of-electromagnetic mass' is far from the `center-of-bare mass' (roughly
speaking). These conditions are often quite restrictive. General equations of
motion were also derived under the assumption that the particle can only
interact with the radiative component of its self-field. These are much simpler
than the equations derived using the full retarded self-field; as are the
conditions required to recover the Lorentz-Dirac equation.Comment: 30 pages; significantly improved presentation; accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev.
Swimming in curved space or The Baron and the cat
We study the swimming of non-relativistic deformable bodies in (empty) static
curved spaces. We focus on the case where the ambient geometry allows for rigid
body motions. In this case the swimming equations turn out to be geometric. For
a small swimmer, the swimming distance in one stroke is determined by the
Riemann curvature times certain moments of the swimmer.Comment: 19 pages 6 figure
On Lorentz invariance and supersymmetry of four particle scattering amplitudes in orbifold sigma model
The supersymmetric orbifold sigma model is expected to describe the
IR limit of the Matrix string theory. In the framework of the model the type
IIA string interaction is governed by a vertex which was recently proposed by
R.Dijkgraaf, E.Verlinde and H.Verlinde. By using this interaction vertex we
derive all four particle scattering amplitudes directly from the orbifold model
in the large limit.Comment: Latex, 23 page
Spinning test particles and clock effect in Schwarzschild spacetime
We study the behaviour of spinning test particles in the Schwarzschild
spacetime. Using Mathisson-Papapetrou equations of motion we confine our
attention to spatially circular orbits and search for observable effects which
could eventually discriminate among the standard supplementary conditions
namely the Corinaldesi-Papapetrou, Pirani and Tulczyjew. We find that if the
world line chosen for the multipole reduction and whose unit tangent we denote
as is a circular orbit then also the generalized momentum of the
spinning test particle is tangent to a circular orbit even though and
are not parallel four-vectors. These orbits are shown to exist because the spin
induced tidal forces provide the required acceleration no matter what
supplementary condition we select. Of course, in the limit of a small spin the
particle's orbit is close of being a circular geodesic and the (small)
deviation of the angular velocities from the geodesic values can be of an
arbitrary sign, corresponding to the possible spin-up and spin-down alignment
to the z-axis. When two spinning particles orbit around a gravitating source in
opposite directions, they make one loop with respect to a given static observer
with different arrival times. This difference is termed clock effect. We find
that a nonzero gravitomagnetic clock effect appears for oppositely orbiting
both spin-up or spin-down particles even in the Schwarzschild spacetime. This
allows us to establish a formal analogy with the case of (spin-less) geodesics
on the equatorial plane of the Kerr spacetime. This result can be verified
experimentally.Comment: IOP macros, eps figures n. 2, to appear on Classical and Quantum
gravity, 200
EFFICIENT ANALYTIC COMPUTATION OF HIGHER-ORDER QCD AMPLITUDES
We review techniques simplifying the analytic calculation of one-loop QCD
amplitudes with many external legs, for use in next-to-leading-order
corrections to multi-jet processes. Particularly useful are the constraints
imposed by perturbative unitarity, collinear singularities and a
supersymmetry-inspired organization of helicity amplitudes. Certain sequences
of one-loop helicity amplitudes with an arbitrary number of external gluons
have been obtained using these constraints.Comment: Talk given at Beyond the Standard Model IV, December 13-18 1994, Lake
Tahoe, CA. Latex, 4 pages, no figures
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