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The Superposition Principle of Waves Not Fulfilled under M. W. Evans' O(3) Hypothesis
In 1992 M.W. Evans proposed a so-called O(3) symmetry of electromagnetic
fields by adding a constant longitudinal "ghost field" to the well-known
transversal plane em waves. He considered this symmetry as a new law of
electromagnetics. Later on, since 2002, this O(3) symmetry became the center of
his Generally Covariant Unified Field Theory which he recently renamed as ECE
Theory. One of the best-checked laws of electrodynamics is the principle of
linear superposition of electromagnetic waves, manifesting itself in
interference phenomena. Its mathematical equivalent is the representation of
electric and magnetic fields as vectors. By considering the superposition of
two phase-shifted waves we show that the superposition principle is
incompatible with M.W. Evans' O(3) hypothesis.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
On the virial theorem for the relativistic operator of Brown and Ravenhall, and the absence of embedded eigenvalues
A virial theorem is established for the operator proposed by Brown and
Ravenhall as a model for relativistic one-electron atoms. As a consequence, it
is proved that the operator has no eigenvalues greater than , where is the fine structure constant, for
all values of the nuclear charge below the critical value : in
particular there are no eigenvalues embedded in the essential spectrum when . Implications for the operators in the partial wave
decomposition are also described.Comment: To appear in Letters in Math. Physic
Hamiltonians of Spherically Symmetric, Scale-Free Galaxies in Action-Angle Coordinates
We present a simple formula for the Hamiltonian in terms of the actions for
spherically symmetric, scale-free potentials. The Hamiltonian is a power-law or
logarithmic function of a linear combination of the actions. Our expression
reduces to the well-known results for the familiar cases of the harmonic
oscillator and the Kepler potential. For other power-laws, as well as for the
singular isothermal sphere, it is exact for the radial and circular orbits, and
very accurate for general orbits. Numerical tests show that the errors are
always small, with mean errors across a grid of actions always less than 1 %
and maximum errors less than 2.5 %. Simple first-order corrections can reduce
mean errors to less than 0.6 % and maximum errors to less than 1 %. We use our
new result to show that :[1] the misalignment angle between debris in a stream
and a progenitor is always very nearly zero in spherical scale-free potentials,
demonstrating that streams can be sometimes well approximated by orbits, [2]
the effects of an adiabatic change in the stellar density profile in the inner
regions of a galaxy weaken any existing 1/r density cusp, which is reduced to
. More generally, we derive the full range of adiabatic cusp
transformations and show how to relate the starting cusp index to the final
cusp index. It follows that adiabatic transformations can never erase a dark
matter cusp.Comment: 6 pages, MNRAS, in pres
Dirac-Sobolev inequalities and estimates for the zero modes of massless Dirac operators
The paper analyses the decay of any zero modes that might exist for a
massless Dirac operator H:= \ba \cdot (1/i) \bgrad + Q, where is -matrix-valued and of order O(|\x|^{-1}) at infinity. The approach
is based on inversion with respect to the unit sphere in and
establishing embedding theorems for Dirac-Sobolev spaces of spinors which
are such that and lie in Comment: 11 page
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