8,520 research outputs found
A Method for Calculating the Structure of (Singular) Spacetimes in the Large
A formalism and its numerical implementation is presented which allows to
calculate quantities determining the spacetime structure in the large directly.
This is achieved by conformal techniques by which future null infinity
(\Scri{}^+) and future timelike infinity () are mapped to grid points on
the numerical grid. The determination of the causal structure of singularities,
the localization of event horizons, the extraction of radiation, and the
avoidance of unphysical reflections at the outer boundary of the grid, are
demonstrated with calculations of spherically symmetric models with a scalar
field as matter and radiation model.Comment: 29 pages, AGG2
General Relativistic Scalar Field Models in the Large
For a class of scalar fields including the massless Klein-Gordon field the
general relativistic hyperboloidal initial value problems are equivalent in a
certain sense. By using this equivalence and conformal techniques it is proven
that the hyperboloidal initial value problem for those scalar fields has an
unique solution which is weakly asymptotically flat. For data sufficiently
close to data for flat spacetime there exist a smooth future null infinity and
a regular future timelike infinity.Comment: 22 pages, latex, AGG 1
An optical linewidth study of a chromoprotein-C-phycocyanin in a low-temperature glass
The temperature dependence of spectral holes burnt into a phycocyanin-doped ethylene glycol/water glass is investigated in the temperature range between 1.5 and 15 K. The data are well described by a power law with an exponent of 1.16 ± 0.1. Chromoproteins thus behave very much the same as glasses doped with small impurity molecules
Site-selective spectroscopy and level ordering in C-phycocyanin
We present a combined fluorescence and hole-burning study of the biliprotein C-phycocyanin. Sharp zero-phonon holes compare with a broad structureless fluorescence. This finding is rationalized in terms of the special level structure in this pigment, the fast energy-transfer processes and a lack of correlation of the energies of the emissive states
Influence of the Particles Creation on the Flat and Negative Curved FLRW Universes
We present a dynamical analysis of the (classical) spatially flat and
negative curved Friedmann-Lameitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) universes evolving,
(by assumption) close to the thermodynamic equilibrium, in presence of a
particles creation process, described by means of a realiable phenomenological
approach, based on the application to the comoving volume (i. e. spatial volume
of unit comoving coordinates) of the theory for open thermodynamic systems. In
particular we show how, since the particles creation phenomenon induces a
negative pressure term, then the choice of a well-grounded ansatz for the time
variation of the particles number, leads to a deep modification of the very
early standard FLRW dynamics. More precisely for the considered FLRW models, we
find (in addition to the limiting case of their standard behaviours) solutions
corresponding to an early universe characterized respectively by an "eternal"
inflationary-like birth and a spatial curvature dominated singularity. In both
these cases the so-called horizon problem finds a natural solution.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, appeared in Class. Quantum Grav., 18, 193, 200
First-order symmetrizable hyperbolic formulations of Einstein's equations including lapse and shift as dynamical fields
First-order hyperbolic systems are promising as a basis for numerical
integration of Einstein's equations. In previous work, the lapse and shift have
typically not been considered part of the hyperbolic system and have been
prescribed independently. This can be expensive computationally, especially if
the prescription involves solving elliptic equations. Therefore, including the
lapse and shift in the hyperbolic system could be advantageous for numerical
work. In this paper, two first-order symmetrizable hyperbolic systems are
presented that include the lapse and shift as dynamical fields and have only
physical characteristic speeds.Comment: 11 page
Metric-affine gauge theory of gravity II. Exact solutions
In continuing our series on metric-affine gravity (see Gronwald IJMP D6
(1997) 263 for Part I), we review the exact solutions in this theory.Comment: Revtex file, 25 pages, final version to appear in IJMP
Numerical inverse Laplace transformation for determining the system response of linear systems in the time domain
An algorithm is described that is based on the method of breaking the Laplace transform down into partial fractions which are then inverse-transformed separately. The sum of the resulting partial functions is the wanted time function. Any problems caused by equation system forms are largely limited by appropriate normalization using an auxiliary parameter. The practical limits of program application are reached when the degree of the denominator of the Laplace transform is seven to eight
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