21,253 research outputs found
Formation of Topological Black holes from Gravitational Collapse
We consider the gravitational collapse of a dust cloud in an asymptotically
anti de Sitter spacetime in which points connected by a discrete subgroup of an
isometry subgroup of anti de Sitter spacetime are identified. We find that
black holes with event horizons of any topology can form from the collapse of
such a cloud. The quasilocal mass parameter of such black holes is proportional
to the initial density, which can be arbitrarily small.Comment: latex, 16 pages, four postscript figure
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
Radial Trends in IMF-Sensitive Absorption Features in Two Early-Type Galaxies: Evidence for Abundance-Driven Gradients
Samples of early-type galaxies show a correlation between stellar velocity
dispersion and the stellar initial mass function (IMF) as inferred from
gravity-sensitive absorption lines in the galaxies' central regions. To search
for spatial variations in the IMF, we have observed two early-type galaxies
with Keck/LRIS and measured radial gradients in the strengths of absorption
features from 4000-5500 \AA and 8000-10,000 \AA. We present spatially
resolved measurements of the dwarf-sensitive spectral indices NaI (8190 \AA)
and Wing-Ford FeH (9915 \AA), as well as indices for species of H, C, CN,
Mg, Ca, TiO, and Fe. Our measurements show a metallicity gradient in both
objects, and Mg/Fe consistent with a shallow gradient in \alpha-enhancement,
matching widely observed trends for massive early-type galaxies. The NaI index
and the CN index at 4160 \AA exhibit significantly steeper gradients,
with a break at ( pc). Inside this radius
NaI strength increases sharply toward the galaxy center, consistent with a
rapid central rise in [Na/Fe]. In contrast, the ratio of FeH to Fe index
strength decreases toward the galaxy center. This behavior cannot be reproduced
by a steepening IMF inside if the IMF is a single power law.
While gradients in the mass function above may occur,
exceptional care is required to disentangle these IMF variations from the
extreme variations in individual element abundances near the galaxies' centers.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. Updates from v1 include an expanded
comparison of measured index strengths to SPS models. 20 page body + 7 page
appendix + references. Includes 25 figure
Generalized entropy and Noether charge
We find an expression for the generalized gravitational entropy of Hawking in
terms of Noether charge. As an example, the entropy of the Taub-Bolt spacetime
is calculated.Comment: 6 pages, revtex, reference correcte
Quasiclassical Equations of Motion for Nonlinear Brownian Systems
Following the formalism of Gell-Mann and Hartle, phenomenological equations
of motion are derived from the decoherence functional formalism of quantum
mechanics, using a path-integral description. This is done explicitly for the
case of a system interacting with a ``bath'' of harmonic oscillators whose
individual motions are neglected. The results are compared to the equations
derived from the purely classical theory. The case of linear interactions is
treated exactly, and nonlinear interactions are compared using classical and
quantum perturbation theory.Comment: 24 pages, CALT-68-1848 (RevTeX 2.0 macros
An empirical calibration to estimate cool dwarf fundamental parameters from H-band spectra
Interferometric radius measurements provide a direct probe of the fundamental
parameters of M dwarfs, but is within reach for only a limited sample of
nearby, bright stars. We use interferometrically-measured radii, bolometric
luminosities, and effective temperatures to develop new empirical calibrations
based on low-resolution, near-infrared spectra. We use H-band Mg and Al
features to derive calibrations for effective temperature, radius and log
luminosity; the standard deviations in the residuals of our best fits are,
respectively, 73K, 0.027Rsun, and 0.049 dex (11% error on luminosity). These
relationships are valid for mid K to mid M dwarf stars, roughly corresponding
to temperatures between 3100 and 4800K. We apply our calibrations to M dwarfs
targeted by the MEarth transiting planet survey and to the cool Kepler Objects
of Interest (KOIs). We independently validate our calibrations by demonstrating
a clear relationship between our inferred parameters and the absolute K
magnitudes of the MEarth stars, and we identify objects with magnitudes too
bright for their estimated luminosities as candidate multiple systems. We also
use our inferred luminosities to address the applicability of near-infrared
metallicity calibrations to mid and late M dwarfs. The temperatures we infer
for the KOIs agree remarkably well with those from the literature; however, our
stellar radii are systematically larger than those presented in previous works
that derive radii from model isochrones. This results in a mean planet radius
that is 15% larger than one would infer using the stellar properties from
recent catalogs. Our results confirm those of previous in-depth studies of
Kepler-42, Kepler-45, and Kepler-186.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. Tables 4 and 5, and machine readable versions of
Tables 5 and 7 are available in the ApJ journal articl
On the Definition of Decoherence
We examine the relationship between the decoherence of quantum-mechanical
histories of a closed system (as discussed by Gell-Mann and Hartle) and
environmentally-induced diagonalization of the density operator for an open
system. We study a definition of decoherence which incorporates both of these
ideas, and show that it leads to a consistent probabilistic interpretation of
the reduced density operator.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, SJSU/TP-93-1
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