1,146 research outputs found
Horizon wave-function for single localized particles: GUP and quantum black hole decay
A localised particle in Quantum Mechanics is described by a wave packet in
position space, regardless of its energy. However, from the point of view of
General Relativity, if the particle's energy density exceeds a certain
threshold, it should be a black hole. In order to combine these two pictures,
we introduce a horizon wave-function determined by the particle wave-function
in position space, which eventually yields the probability that the particle is
a black hole. The existence of a minimum mass for black holes naturally
follows, albeit not in the form of a sharp value around the Planck scale, but
rather like a vanishing probability that a particle much lighter than the
Planck mass be a black hole. We also show that our construction entails an
effective Generalised Uncertainty Principle (GUP), simply obtained by adding
the uncertainties coming from the two wave-functions associated to a particle.
Finally, the decay of microscopic (quantum) black holes is also described in
agreement with what the GUP predicts.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, extended version of arXiv:1305.3195 with new
results about the GUP and black hole decay, clarifications about black hole
decay adde
Electromagnetic waves around dilatonic stars and naked singularities
We study the propagation of classical electromagnetic waves on the simplest
four-dimensional spherically symmetric metric with a dilaton background field.
Solutions to the relevant equations are obtained perturbatively in a parameter
which measures the strength of the dilaton field (hence parameterizes the
departure from Schwarzschild geometry). The loss of energy from outgoing modes
is estimated as a back-scattering process against the dilaton background, which
would affect the luminosity of stars with a dilaton field. The radiation
emitted by a freely falling point-like source on such a background is also
studied by analytical and numerical methods.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Effects of zinc oxide filler on the curing and mechanical response of alkyd coatings
The mechanical properties of an alkyd resin filled with zinc oxide pigment were studied at different concentrations over a wide range of time scales using dynamic mechanical analysis, quartz crystal rheometry and nanoindentation. The motivation for this work stems from the interest in accessing the long-term properties of paint coatings by studying the mechanical properties of historic paints. In this foundational work, we compare three different modalities of mechanical measurements and systematically determine the effect of pigment filler loading on the measured properties. Quantitative agreement between the methods is obtained when the characteristic time scales of each of the methods is taken into account. While nanoindentation is the technique most readily applied to historic paint samples, the rheometric quartz crystal microbalance (rheo-QCM) is the best suited for obtaining mechanistic information from measurements of paint properties over time, provided that appropriate thin-film samples can be produced. In these studies we find that ZnO increases the rate of oxidation of the alkyd during the initial stages of cure by an amount that depends on the ZnO content
Gravitational Collapse of a Radiating Shell
We study the collapse of a self-gravitating and radiating shell. Matter
constituting the shell is quantized and the construction is viewed as a
semiclassical model of possible black hole formation. It is shown that the
shell internal degrees of freedom are excited by the quantum non-adiabaticity
of the collapse and, consequently, on coupling them to a massless scalar field,
the collapsing matter emits a burst of coherent (thermal) radiation.Comment: LaTeX, 34 pages, 21 EPS figures include
Minimum black hole mass from colliding Gaussian packets
We study the formation of a black hole in the collision of two Gaussian
packets. Rather than following their dynamical evolution in details, we assume
a horizon forms when the mass function for the two packets becomes larger than
half the flat areal radius, as it would occur in a spherically symmetric
geometry. This simple approximation allows us to determine the existence of a
minimum black hole mass solely related to the width of the packets. We then
comment on the possible physical implications, both in classical and quantum
physics, and models with extra spatial dimensions.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Radion Induced Spontaneous Baryogenesis
We describe a possible scenario for the baryogenesis arising when matter is
added on the branes of a Randall-Sundrum model with a radion stabilizing
potential. We show that the radion field can naturally induce spontaneous
baryogenesis when the cosmological evolution for the matter on the branes is
taken into account.Comment: LaTeX 2e, 8 pages and no figures, minor corrections to match version
to appear in MPL
Minimum length effects in black hole physics
We review the main consequences of the possible existence of a minimum
measurable length, of the order of the Planck scale, on quantum effects
occurring in black hole physics. In particular, we focus on the ensuing minimum
mass for black holes and how modified dispersion relations affect the Hawking
decay, both in four space-time dimensions and in models with extra spatial
dimensions. In the latter case, we briefly discuss possible phenomenological
signatures.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures. To be published in "Quantum Aspects of Black
Holes", ed. X. Calmet (Springer, 2014
Identification and characterization of novel factors that act in the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway in nematodes, flies and mammals
Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a surveillance mechanism that degrades mRNAs harboring premature termination codons (PTCs). We have conducted a genome-wide RNAi screen in Caenorhabditis elegans that resulted in the identification of five novel NMD genes that are conserved throughout evolution. Two of their human homologs, GNL2 (ngp-1) and SEC13 (npp-20), are also required for NMD in human cells. We also show that the C. elegans gene noah-2, which is present in Drosophila melanogaster but absent in humans, is an NMD factor in fruit flies. Altogether, these data identify novel NMD factors that are conserved throughout evolution, highlighting the complexity of the NMD pathway and
suggesting that yet uncovered novel factors may act to regulate this process
Quantum gravitational fluctuations and the semi-classical limit
An attempt is made to go beyond the standard semi-classical approximation for
gravity in the Born-Oppenheimer decomposition of the wave-function in
minisuperspace. New terms are included which correspond to quantum
gravitational fluctuations on the background metric. Their existence renders
the definition of the semi-classical limit rather delicate and can lead to the
avoidance of the singularities the classical theory predicts in cosmology and
in the gravitational collapse of compact objects.Comment: LaTeX, 15 pages, no figure
Improved WKB analysis of Slow-Roll Inflation
We extend the WKB method for the computation of cosmological perturbations
during inflation beyond leading order and provide the power spectra of scalar
and tensor perturbations to second order in the slow-roll parameters. Our
method does not require that the slow-roll parameters be constant. Although
leading and next-to-leading results in the slow-roll parameters depend on the
approximation technique used in the computation, we find that the inflationary
theoretical predictions obtained may reach the accuracy required by planned
observations. In two technical appendices, we compare our techniques and
results with previous findings.Comment: REVTeX 4, 13 pages, no figures, final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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