31,499 research outputs found
Exact Solutions of Relativistic Two-Body Motion in Lineal Gravity
We develop the canonical formalism for a system of bodies in lineal
gravity and obtain exact solutions to the equations of motion for N=2. The
determining equation of the Hamiltonian is derived in the form of a
transcendental equation, which leads to the exact Hamiltonian to infinite order
of the gravitational coupling constant. In the equal mass case explicit
expressions of the trajectories of the particles are given as the functions of
the proper time, which show characteristic features of the motion depending on
the strength of gravity (mass) and the magnitude and sign of the cosmological
constant. As expected, we find that a positive cosmological constant has a
repulsive effect on the motion, while a negative one has an attractive effect.
However, some surprising features emerge that are absent for vanishing
cosmological constant. For a certain range of the negative cosmological
constant the motion shows a double maximum behavior as a combined result of an
induced momentum-dependent cosmological potential and the gravitational
attraction between the particles. For a positive cosmological constant, not
only bounded motions but also unbounded ones are realized. The change of the
metric along the movement of the particles is also exactly derived.Comment: 37 pages, Latex, 24 figure
Exact Solution for Relativistic Two-Body Motion in Dilaton Gravity
We present an exact solution to the problem of the relativistic motion of 2
point masses in dimensional dilaton gravity. The motion of the bodies
is governed entirely by their mutual gravitational influence, and the spacetime
metric is likewise fully determined by their stress-energy. A Newtonian limit
exists, and there is a static gravitational potential. Our solution gives the
exact Hamiltonian to infinite order in the gravitational coupling constant.Comment: 6 pages, latex, 3 figure
Exact Solution for the Metric and the Motion of Two Bodies in (1+1) Dimensional Gravity
We present the exact solution of two-body motion in (1+1) dimensional dilaton
gravity by solving the constraint equations in the canonical formalism. The
determining equation of the Hamiltonian is derived in a transcendental form and
the Hamiltonian is expressed for the system of two identical particles in terms
of the Lambert function. The function has two real branches which join
smoothly onto each other and the Hamiltonian on the principal branch reduces to
the Newtonian limit for small coupling constant. On the other branch the
Hamiltonian yields a new set of motions which can not be understood as
relativistically correcting the Newtonian motion. The explicit trajectory in
the phase space is illustrated for various values of the energy. The
analysis is extended to the case of unequal masses. The full expression of
metric tensor is given and the consistency between the solution of the metric
and the equations of motion is rigorously proved.Comment: 34 pages, LaTeX, 16 figure
Statistical Mechanics of Relativistic One-Dimensional Self-Gravitating Systems
We consider the statistical mechanics of a general relativistic
one-dimensional self-gravitating system. The system consists of -particles
coupled to lineal gravity and can be considered as a model of
relativistically interacting sheets of uniform mass. The partition function and
one-particle distitrubion functions are computed to leading order in
where is the speed of light; as results for the
non-relativistic one-dimensional self-gravitating system are recovered. We find
that relativistic effects generally cause both position and momentum
distribution functions to become more sharply peaked, and that the temperature
of a relativistic gas is smaller than its non-relativistic counterpart at the
same fixed energy. We consider the large-N limit of our results and compare
this to the non-relativistic case.Comment: latex, 60 pages, 22 figure
Chaos in an Exact Relativistic 3-body Self-Gravitating System
We consider the problem of three body motion for a relativistic
one-dimensional self-gravitating system. After describing the canonical
decomposition of the action, we find an exact expression for the 3-body
Hamiltonian, implicitly determined in terms of the four coordinate and momentum
degrees of freedom in the system. Non-relativistically these degrees of freedom
can be rewritten in terms of a single particle moving in a two-dimensional
hexagonal well. We find the exact relativistic generalization of this
potential, along with its post-Newtonian approximation. We then specialize to
the equal mass case and numerically solve the equations of motion that follow
from the Hamiltonian. Working in hexagonal-well coordinates, we obtaining
orbits in both the hexagonal and 3-body representations of the system, and plot
the Poincare sections as a function of the relativistic energy parameter . We find two broad categories of periodic and quasi-periodic motions that we
refer to as the annulus and pretzel patterns, as well as a set of chaotic
motions that appear in the region of phase-space between these two types.
Despite the high degree of non-linearity in the relativistic system, we find
that the the global structure of its phase space remains qualitatively the same
as its non-relativisitic counterpart for all values of that we could
study. However the relativistic system has a weaker symmetry and so its
Poincare section develops an asymmetric distortion that increases with
increasing . For the post-Newtonian system we find that it experiences a
KAM breakdown for : above which the near integrable regions
degenerate into chaos.Comment: latex, 65 pages, 36 figures, high-resolution figures available upon
reques
Dynamical N-body Equlibrium in Circular Dilaton Gravity
We obtain a new exact equilibrium solution to the N-body problem in a
one-dimensional relativistic self-gravitating system. It corresponds to an
expanding/contracting spacetime of a circle with N bodies at equal proper
separations from one another around the circle. Our methods are
straightforwardly generalizable to other dilatonic theories of gravity, and
provide a new class of solutions to further the study of (relativistic)
one-dimensional self-gravitating systems.Comment: 4 pages, latex, reference added, minor changes in wordin
New Types of Thermodynamics from -Dimensional Black Holes
For normal thermodynamic systems superadditivity , homogeneity \H and
concavity \C of the entropy hold, whereas for -dimensional black holes
the latter two properties are violated. We show that -dimensional black
holes exhibit qualitatively new types of thermodynamic behaviour, discussed
here for the first time, in which \C always holds, \H is always violated
and may or may not be violated, depending of the magnitude of the black
hole mass. Hence it is now seen that neither superadditivity nor concavity
encapsulate the meaning of the second law in all situations.Comment: WATPHYS-TH93/05, Latex, 10 pgs. 1 figure (available on request), to
appear in Class. Quant. Gra
N-body Gravity and the Schroedinger Equation
We consider the problem of the motion of bodies in a self-gravitating
system in two spacetime dimensions. We point out that this system can be mapped
onto the quantum-mechanical problem of an N-body generalization of the problem
of the H molecular ion in one dimension. The canonical gravitational
N-body formalism can be extended to include electromagnetic charges. We derive
a general algorithm for solving this problem, and show how it reduces to known
results for the 2-body and 3-body systems.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, references added, typos corrected, final version
that appears in CQ
Students Speak! - Understanding the Value of HBCUs From Student Perspectives
Explores students' views about their choice of historically black colleges and universities, their on-campus experiences, and the value of HBCUs. Examines the role of pre-college contexts, HBCUs' impact on academic and personal growth, and implications
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