11,728 research outputs found

    Evaporation of a Kerr black hole by emission of scalar and higher spin particles

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    We study the evolution of an evaporating rotating black hole, described by the Kerr metric, which is emitting either solely massless scalar particles or a mixture of massless scalar and nonzero spin particles. Allowing the hole to radiate scalar particles increases the mass loss rate and decreases the angular momentum loss rate relative to a black hole which is radiating nonzero spin particles. The presence of scalar radiation can cause the evaporating hole to asymptotically approach a state which is described by a nonzero value of a∗≡a/Ma_* \equiv a / M. This is contrary to the conventional view of black hole evaporation, wherein all black holes spin down more rapidly than they lose mass. A hole emitting solely scalar radiation will approach a final asymptotic state described by a∗≃0.555a_* \simeq 0.555. A black hole that is emitting scalar particles and a canonical set of nonzero spin particles (3 species of neutrinos, a single photon species, and a single graviton species) will asymptotically approach a nonzero value of a∗a_* only if there are at least 32 massless scalar fields. We also calculate the lifetime of a primordial black hole that formed with a value of the rotation parameter a∗a_{*}, the minimum initial mass of a primordial black hole that is seen today with a rotation parameter a∗a_{*}, and the entropy of a black hole that is emitting scalar or higher spin particles.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures, RevTeX format; added clearer descriptions for variables, added journal referenc

    Large-scale wind-tunnel tests of descent performance of an airplane model with a tilt wing and differential propeller thrust

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    Wind tunnel tests of wing stall, performance, and longitudinal stability & control of large model v/stol tilt wing transport aircraf

    Proof of the Generalized Second Law for Quasistationary Semiclassical Black Holes

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    A simple direct explicit proof of the generalized second law of black hole thermodynamics is given for a quasistationary semiclassical black hole.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX, report Alberta-Thy-10-93 (revision of paper in response to Phys. Rev. Lett. referees' comments, which suffered a series of long delays

    Rotating Black Holes in Higher Dimensions with a Cosmological Constant

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    We present the metric for a rotating black hole with a cosmological constant and with arbitrary angular momenta in all higher dimensions. The metric is given in both Kerr-Schild and Boyer-Lindquist form. In the Euclidean-signature case, we also obtain smooth compact Einstein spaces on associated S^{D-2} bundles over S^2, infinitely many for each odd D\ge 5. Applications to string theory and M-theory are indicated.Comment: 8 pages, Latex. Short version, with more compact notation, of hep-th/0404008. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Black-hole thermodynamics and singular solutions of the Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff equation

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    Thermodynamic equilibrium of a self-gravitating perfect fluid for a spherically symmetric system containing a black hole of mass M is investigated by means of the Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff (TOV) equation. A singular family of solutions of the TOV equation is described. At r≫2M these solutions can be used to represent a perfect fluid (i.e., photon gas) of temperature T_(BH) =(8πM)^(−1) in equilibrium with a Schwarzschild black hole. The energy density is positive at all r>0. A singular negative point mass resides at r=0

    Spinning Down a Black Hole With Scalar Fields

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    We study the evolution of a Kerr black hole emitting scalar radiation via the Hawking process. We show that the rate at which mass and angular momentum are lost by the black hole leads to a final evolutionary state with nonzero angular momentum, namely a/M≈0.555a/M \approx 0.555.Comment: 4 pages (including 3 postscript figures), Revtex, uses epsf.tex, twocolumn.sty and header.sty (included). Submitted to Physical Review Letter

    Observation of infinite-range intensity correlations above, at and below the 3D Anderson localization transition

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    We investigate long-range intensity correlations on both sides of the Anderson transition of classical waves in a three-dimensional (3D) disordered material. Our ultrasonic experiments are designed to unambiguously detect a recently predicted infinite-range C0 contribution, due to local density of states fluctuations near the source. We find that these C0 correlations, in addition to C2 and C3 contributions, are significantly enhanced near mobility edges. Separate measurements of the inverse participation ratio reveal a link between C0 and the anomalous dimension \Delta_2, implying that C0 may also be used to explore the critical regime of the Anderson transition.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures (main text plus supplemental information). Updated version includes an improved introductory paragraph, minor text revisions, a revised title and additional supplemental information on the experimental detail

    Chaotic Scattering and Capture of Strings by Black Hole

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    We consider scattering and capture of circular cosmic strings by a Schwarzschild black hole. Although being a priori a very simple axially symmetric two-body problem, it shows all the features of chaotic scattering. In particular, it contains a fractal set of unstable periodic solutions; a so-called strange repellor. We study the different types of trajectories and obtain the fractal dimension of the basin-boundary separating the space of initial conditions according to the different asymptotic outcomes. We also consider the fractal dimension as a function of energy, and discuss the transition from order to chaos.Comment: RevTeX 3.1, 9 pages, 5 figure

    Rapid Cooling of the Neutron Star in Cassiopeia A Triggered by Neutron Superfluidity in Dense Matter

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    We propose that the observed cooling of the neutron star in Cassiopeia A is due to enhanced neutrino emission from the recent onset of the breaking and formation of neutron Cooper pairs in the 3P2 channel. We find that the critical temperature for this superfluid transition is ~0.5x10^9 K. The observed rapidity of the cooling implies that protons were already in a superconducting state with a larger critical temperature. Our prediction that this cooling will continue for several decades at the present rate can be tested by continuous monitoring of this neutron star.Comment: Revised version, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
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