4,264 research outputs found
Statistical mechanics of Kerr-Newman dilaton black holes and the bootstrap condition
The Bekenstein-Hawking ``entropy'' of a Kerr-Newman dilaton black hole is
computed in a perturbative expansion in the charge-to-mass ratio. The most
probable configuration for a gas of such black holes is analyzed in the
microcanonical formalism and it is argued that it does not satisfy the
equipartition principle but a bootstrap condition. It is also suggested that
the present results are further support for an interpretation of black holes as
excitations of extended objects.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 2 PS figures included (requires epsf), submitted to
Phys. Rev. Let
Microfield Dynamics of Black Holes
The microcanonical treatment of black holes as opposed to the canonical
formulation is reviewed and some major differences are displayed. In particular
the decay rates are compared in the two different pictures.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures, Revtex, Minor change in forma
Infinite average lifetime of an unstable bright state in the green fluorescent protein
The time evolution of the fluorescence intensity emitted by well-defined
ensembles of Green Fluorescent Proteins has been studied by using a standard
confocal microscope. In contrast with previous results obtained in single
molecule experiments, the photo-bleaching of the ensemble is well described by
a model based on Levy statistics. Moreover, this simple theoretical model
allows us to obtain information about the energy-scales involved in the aging
process.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
New perturbative solutions of the Kerr-Newman dilatonic black hole field equations
This work describes new perturbative solutions to the classical,
four-dimensional Kerr--Newman dilaton black hole field equations. Our solutions
do not require the black hole to be slowly rotating. The unperturbed solution
is taken to be the ordinary Kerr solution, and the perturbation parameter is
effectively the square of the charge-to-mass ratio of the
Kerr--Newman black hole. We have uncovered a new, exact conjugation (mirror)
symmetry for the theory, which maps the small coupling sector to the strong
coupling sector (). We also calculate the gyromagnetic ratio of
the black hole.Comment: Revtex, 27 page
Ghost Busting: PT-Symmetric Interpretation of the Lee Model
The Lee model was introduced in the 1950s as an elementary quantum field
theory in which mass, wave function, and charge renormalization could be
carried out exactly. In early studies of this model it was found that there is
a critical value of g^2, the square of the renormalized coupling constant,
above which g_0^2, the square of the unrenormalized coupling constant, is
negative. Thus, for g^2 larger than this critical value, the Hamiltonian of the
Lee model becomes non-Hermitian. It was also discovered that in this
non-Hermitian regime a new state appears whose norm is negative. This state is
called a ghost state. It has always been assumed that in this ghost regime the
Lee model is an unacceptable quantum theory because unitarity appears to be
violated. However, in this regime while the Hamiltonian is not Hermitian, it
does possess PT symmetry. It has recently been discovered that a non-Hermitian
Hamiltonian having PT symmetry may define a quantum theory that is unitary. The
proof of unitarity requires the construction of a new time-independent operator
called C. In terms of C one can define a new inner product with respect to
which the norms of the states in the Hilbert space are positive. Furthermore,
it has been shown that time evolution in such a theory is unitary. In this
paper the C operator for the Lee model in the ghost regime is constructed
exactly in the V/N-theta sector. It is then shown that the ghost state has a
positive norm and that the Lee model is an acceptable unitary quantum field
theory for all values of g^2.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
Perturbations in the Kerr-Newman Dilatonic Black Hole Background: Maxwell Waves, the Dilaton Background and Gravitational Lensing
In this paper we continue the analysis of our previous papers and study the
affect of the existence of a non-trivial dilaton background on the propagation
of electromagnetic waves in the Kerr-Newman dilatonic black hole space-time.
For this purpose we again employ the double expansion in both the background
electric charge and the wave parameters of the relevant quantities in the
Newman-Penrose formalism and then identify the first order at which the dilaton
background enters the Maxwell equations. We then assume that gravitational and
dilatonic waves are negligible (at that order in the charge parameter) with
respect to electromagnetic waves and argue that this condition is consistent
with the solutions already found in the previous paper. Explicit expressions
are given for the asymptotic behavior of scattered waves, and a simple physical
model is proposed in order to test the effects. An expression for the relative
intensity is obtained for Reissner-Nordstrom dilaton black holes using
geometrical optics. A comparison with the approximation of geometrical optics
for Kerr-Newman dilaton black holes shows that at the order to which the
calculations are carried out gravitational lensing of optical images cannot
probe the dilaton background.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Rotational Correlation Functions of Single Molecules
Single molecule rotational correlation functions are analyzed for several
reorientation geometries. Even for the simplest model of isotropic rotational
diffusion our findings predict non-exponential correlation functions to be
observed by polarization sensitive single molecule fluorescence microscopy.
This may have a deep impact on interpreting the results of molecular
reorientation measurements in heterogeneous environments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
- …