2,400 research outputs found
Energy extremality in the presence of a black hole
We derive the so-called first law of black hole mechanics for variations
about stationary black hole solutions to the Einstein--Maxwell equations in the
absence of sources. That is, we prove that where the black hole parameters and denote mass, surface gravity, horizon area, angular velocity of the
horizon, angular momentum, electric potential of the horizon and charge
respectively. The unvaried fields are those of a stationary, charged, rotating
black hole and the variation is to an arbitrary `nearby' black hole which is
not necessarily stationary. Our approach is 4-dimensional in spirit and uses
techniques involving Action variations and Noether operators. We show that the
above formula holds on any asymptotically flat spatial 3-slice which extends
from an arbitrary cross-section of the (future) horizon to spatial
infinity.(Thus, the existence of a bifurcation surface is irrelevant to our
demonstration. On the other hand, the derivation assumes without proof that the
horizon possesses at least one of the following two (related)properties: ()
it cannot be destroyed by arbitrarily small perturbations of the metric and
other fields which may be present, () the expansion of the null geodesic
generators of the perturbed horizon goes to zero in the distant future.)Comment: 30 pages, latex fil
Large Fluctuations in the Horizon Area and what they can tell us about Entropy and Quantum Gravity
We evoke situations where large fluctuations in the entropy are induced, our
main example being a spacetime containing a potential black hole whose
formation depends on the outcome of a quantum mechanical event. We argue that
the teleological character of the event horizon implies that the consequent
entropy fluctuations must be taken seriously in any interpretation of the
quantal formalism. We then indicate how the entropy can be well defined despite
the teleological character of the horizon, and we argue that this is possible
only in the context of a spacetime or ``histories'' formulation of quantum
gravity, as opposed to a canonical one, concluding that only a spacetime
formulation has the potential to compute --- from first principles and in the
general case --- the entropy of a black hole. From the entropy fluctuations in
a related example, we also derive a condition governing the form taken by the
entropy, when it is expressed as a function of the quantal density-operator.Comment: 35 pages, plain Tex, needs mathmacros.tex and msmacros.te
Stable non-uniform black strings below the critical dimension
The higher-dimensional vacuum Einstein equation admits translationally
non-uniform black string solutions. It has been argued that infinitesimally
non-uniform black strings should be unstable in 13 or fewer dimensions and
otherwise stable. We construct numerically non-uniform black string solutions
in 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15 dimensions. Their stability is investigated using
local Penrose inequalities. Weakly non-uniform solutions behave as expected.
However, in 12 and 13 dimensions, strongly non-uniform solutions appear to be
stable and can have greater horizon area than a uniform string of the same
mass. In 14 and 15 dimensions all non-uniform black strings appear to be
stable.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figures. V2: reference added, matches published versio
Compactness of the space of causal curves
We prove that the space of causal curves between compact subsets of a
separable globally hyperbolic poset is itself compact in the Vietoris topology.
Although this result implies the usual result in general relativity, its proof
does not require the use of geometry or differentiable structure.Comment: 15 page
Causal Sets: Quantum gravity from a fundamentally discrete spacetime
In order to construct a quantum theory of gravity, we may have to abandon
certain assumptions we were making. In particular, the concept of spacetime as
a continuum substratum is questioned. Causal Sets is an attempt to construct a
quantum theory of gravity starting with a fundamentally discrete spacetime. In
this contribution we review the whole approach, focusing on some recent
developments in the kinematics and dynamics of the approach.Comment: 10 pages, review of causal sets based on talk given at the 1st MCCQG
conferenc
A Classical Sequential Growth Dynamics for Causal Sets
Starting from certain causality conditions and a discrete form of general
covariance, we derive a very general family of classically stochastic,
sequential growth dynamics for causal sets. The resulting theories provide a
relatively accessible ``half way house'' to full quantum gravity that possibly
contains the latter's classical limit (general relativity). Because they can be
expressed in terms of state models for an assembly of Ising spins living on the
relations of the causal set, these theories also illustrate how
non-gravitational matter can arise dynamically from the causal set without
having to be built in at the fundamental level. Additionally, our results bring
into focus some interpretive issues of importance for causal set dynamics, and
for quantum gravity more generally.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figures, LaTeX, added references and a footnote, minor
correction
A Causal Order for Spacetimes with Lorentzian Metrics: Proof of Compactness of the Space of Causal Curves
We recast the tools of ``global causal analysis'' in accord with an approach
to the subject animated by two distinctive features: a thoroughgoing reliance
on order-theoretic concepts, and a utilization of the Vietoris topology for the
space of closed subsets of a compact set. We are led to work with a new causal
relation which we call , and in terms of it we formulate extended
definitions of concepts like causal curve and global hyperbolicity. In
particular we prove that, in a spacetime \M which is free of causal cycles,
one may define a causal curve simply as a compact connected subset of \M
which is linearly ordered by . Our definitions all make sense for
arbitrary metrics (and even for certain metrics which fail to be
invertible in places). Using this feature, we prove for a general metric,
the familiar theorem that the space of causal curves between any two compact
subsets of a globally hyperbolic spacetime is compact. We feel that our
approach, in addition to yielding a more general theorem, simplifies and
clarifies the reasoning involved. Our results have application in a recent
positive energy theorem, and may also prove useful in the study of topology
change. We have tried to make our treatment self-contained by including proofs
of all the facts we use which are not widely available in reference works on
topology and differential geometry.Comment: Two small revisions to accomodate errors brought to our attention by
R.S. Garcia. No change to chief results. 33 page
Why do we observe a small but non zero cosmological constant ?
The current observations seem to suggest that the universe has a positive
cosmological constant of the order of while the most natural value for
the cosmological constant will be where
is the Planck length. This reduction of the cosmological constant from
to may be interpreted as due to the ability of
quantum micro structure of spacetime to readjust itself and absorb bulk vacuum
energy densities. Being a quantum mechanical process, such a cancellation
cannot be exact and the residual quantum fluctuations appear as the ``small''
cosmological constant. I describe the features of a toy model for the spacetime
micro structure which could allow for the bulk vacuum energy densities to be
canceled leaving behind a small residual value of the the correct magnitude.
Some other models (like the ones based on canonical ensemble for the four
volume or quantum fluctuations of the horizon size) lead to an insignificantly
small value of with showing that obtaining the
correct order of magnitude for the residual fluctuations in the cosmological
constant is a nontrivial task, becaue of the existence of the small
dimensionless number .Comment: couple of references added; matches with published versio
Hilbert Spaces from Path Integrals
It is shown that a Hilbert space can be constructed for a quantum system
starting from a framework in which histories are fundamental. The Decoherence
Functional provides the inner product on this "History Hilbert space". It is
also shown that the History Hilbert space is the standard Hilbert space in the
case of non-relativistic quantum mechanics.Comment: 22 pages. Minor updates to match published versio
Spacelike distance from discrete causal order
Any discrete approach to quantum gravity must provide some prescription as to
how to deduce continuum properties from the discrete substructure. In the
causal set approach it is straightforward to deduce timelike distances, but
surprisingly difficult to extract spacelike distances, because of the unique
combination of discreteness with local Lorentz invariance in that approach. We
propose a number of methods to overcome this difficulty, one of which
reproduces the spatial distance between two points in a finite region of
Minkowski space. We provide numerical evidence that this definition can be used
to define a `spatial nearest neighbor' relation on a causal set, and conjecture
that this can be exploited to define the length of `continuous curves' in
causal sets which are approximated by curved spacetime. This provides evidence
in support of the ``Hauptvermutung'' of causal sets.Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures, revtex4; journal versio
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