20 research outputs found
Mode-by-mode summation for the zero point electromagnetic energy of an infinite cylinder
Using the mode-by-mode summation technique the zero point energy of the
electromagnetic field is calculated for the boundary conditions given on the
surface of an infinite solid cylinder. It is assumed that the dielectric and
magnetic characteristics of the material which makes up the cylinder
and of that which makes up the surroundings obey the relation . With this
assumption all the divergences cancel. The divergences are regulated by making
use of zeta function techniques. Numerical calculations are carried out for a
dilute dielectric cylinder and for a perfectly conducting cylindrical shell.
The Casimir energy in the first case vanishes, and in the second is in complete
agreement with that obtained by DeRaad and Milton who employed a Green's
function technique with an ultraviolet regulator.Comment: REVTeX, 16 pages, no figures and tables; transcription error in
previous version corrected, giving a zero Casimir energy for a tenuous
cylinde
The Amplitude in an External Homogeneous Electromagnetic Field
Neutrino-photon interactions in the presence of an external homogeneous
constant electromagnetic field are studied. The amplitude is
calculated in an electromagnetic field of the general type, when the two field
invariants are nonzero.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Vector Casimir effect for a D-dimensional sphere
The Casimir energy or stress due to modes in a D-dimensional volume subject
to TM (mixed) boundary conditions on a bounding spherical surface is
calculated. Both interior and exterior modes are included. Together with
earlier results found for scalar modes (TE modes), this gives the Casimir
effect for fluctuating ``electromagnetic'' (vector) fields inside and outside a
spherical shell. Known results for three dimensions, first found by Boyer, are
reproduced. Qualitatively, the results for TM modes are similar to those for
scalar modes: Poles occur in the stress at positive even dimensions, and cusps
(logarithmic singularities) occur for integer dimensions . Particular
attention is given the interesting case of D=2.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure, REVTe
Weak reaction freeze-out constraints on primordial magnetic fields
We explore constraints on the strength of the primordial magnetic field based
upon the weak reaction freeze-out in the early universe. We find that limits on
the strength of the magnetic field found in other works are recovered simply by
examining the temperature at which the rate of weak reactions drops below the
rate of universal expansion ( H). The temperature for which the
ratio at freeze-out leads to acceptable helium production implies limits
on the magnetic field. This simplifies the application of magnetic fields to
other cosmological variants of the standard big-bang. As an illustration we
also consider effects of neutrino degeneracy on the allowed limits to the
primordial magnetic field.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. D., 6 pages, 2 figure
Casimir Energy for Spherical boundaries
Calculations of the Casimir energy for spherical geometries which are based
on integrations of the stress tensor are critically examined. It is shown that
despite their apparent agreement with numerical results obtained from mode
summation methods, they contain a number of serious errors. Specifically, these
include (1) an improper application of the stress tensor to spherical
boundaries, (2) the neglect of pole terms in contour integrations, and (3) the
imposition of inappropriate boundary conditions upon the relevant propagators.
A calculation which is based on the stress tensor and which avoids such
problems is shown to be possible. It is, however, equivalent to the mode
summation method and does not therefore constitute an independent calculation
of the Casimir energy.Comment: Revtex, 7 pages, Appendix added providing details of failure of
stress tensor metho
Neutrino emission via the plasma process in a magnetized plasma
Neutrino emission via the plasma process using the vertex formalism for QED
in a strongly magnetized plasma is considered. A new vertex function is
introduced to include the axial vector part of the weak interaction. Our
results are compared with previous calculations, and the effect of the axial
vector coupling on neutrino emission is discussed. The contribution from the
axial vector coupling can be of the same order as or greater than the vector
vector coupling under certain plasma conditions.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
On the Manifestation for Longitudinally Polarized
The contribution of the structure function to polarized deep inelastic
scattering is slightly redefined in order to avoid kinematical zeros. Its
strong -dependence implied by the Burkhardt-Cottingham (BC) sum rule
naturally explains the sign change of the generalized Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn
(GDH) sum rule. The status of the BC sum rule and implications for other spin
processes are discussed.Comment: 16 pages,CPT-94/P.3014,late
Casimir effect for a -dimensional sphere
The Casimir force on a -dimensional sphere due to the confinement of a
massless scalar field is computed as a function of , where is a
continuous variable that ranges from to . The dependence of
the force on the dimension is obtained using a simple and straightforward
Green's function technique. We find that the Casimir force vanishes as ( non-even integer) and also vanishes when is a negative even
integer. The force has simple poles at positive even integer values of .Comment: 22 pages, REVTeX, 4 uuencoded figures, OKHEP-94-0
Casimir Energy for a Spherical Cavity in a Dielectric: Applications to Sonoluminescence
In the final few years of his life, Julian Schwinger proposed that the
``dynamical Casimir effect'' might provide the driving force behind the
puzzling phenomenon of sonoluminescence. Motivated by that exciting suggestion,
we have computed the static Casimir energy of a spherical cavity in an
otherwise uniform material. As expected the result is divergent; yet a
plausible finite answer is extracted, in the leading uniform asymptotic
approximation. This result agrees with that found using zeta-function
regularization. Numerically, we find far too small an energy to account for the
large burst of photons seen in sonoluminescence. If the divergent result is
retained, it is of the wrong sign to drive the effect. Dispersion does not
resolve this contradiction. In the static approximation, the Fresnel drag term
is zero; on the mother hand, electrostriction could be comparable to the
Casimir term. It is argued that this adiabatic approximation to the dynamical
Casimir effect should be quite accurate.Comment: 23 pages, no figures, REVTe
High temperature asymptotics of thermodynamic functions of electromagnetic field subjected to boundary conditions on a sphere and cylinder
The high temperature asymptotics of thermodynamic functions of
electromagnetic field subjected to boundary conditions with spherical and
cylindrical symmetries are constructed by making use of a general expansion in
terms of heat kernel coefficients and the related determinant. For this, some
new heat kernel coefficients and determinants had to be calculated for the
boundary conditions under consideration. The obtained results reproduce all the
asymptotics derived by other methods in the problems at hand and involve a few
new terms in the high temperature expansions. An obvious merit of this approach
is its universality and applicability to any boundary value problem correctly
formulated.Comment: 27 pages, REVTeX, no figures, no tables, presentations is improved, a
few references are adde