7,749 research outputs found
Astrophysical Evidence for the Non-Hermitian but -symmetric Hamiltonian of Conformal Gravity
In this review we discuss the connection between two seemingly disparate
topics, macroscopic gravity on astrophysical scales and Hamiltonians that are
not Hermitian but symmetric on microscopic ones. In particular we show
that the quantum-mechanical unitarity problem of the fourth-order derivative
conformal gravity theory is resolved by recognizing that the scalar product
appropriate to the theory is not the Dirac norm associated with a Hermitian
Hamiltonian but is instead the norm associated with a non-Hermitian but
-symmetric Hamiltonian. Moreover, the fourth-order theory Hamiltonian is
not only not Hermitian, it is not even diagonalizable, being of Jordan-block
form. With symmetry we establish that conformal gravity is consistent at
the quantum-mechanical level. In consequence, we can apply the theory to data,
to find that the theory is capable of naturally accounting for the systematics
of the rotation curves of a large and varied sample of 138 spiral galaxies
without any need for dark matter. The success of the fits provides evidence for
the relevance of non-diagonalizable but -symmetric Hamiltonians to physics.Comment: LaTex, 15 pages, 21 figures. Expanded version of talks given at the
International Seminar and Workshop "Quantum Physics with Non-Hermitian
Operators", Dresden, June 2011 and the Symposium "PT Quantum Mechanics 2011",
Heidelberg, September 2011. Prepared for a Special Issue of Fortschritte der
Physik - Progress of Physics on "Quantum Physics with Non-Hermitian
Operators: Theory and Experiment
Conformal cosmology with a positive effective gravitational constant
The conformal cosmological model presented by Mannheim predicts a negative
value for the effective gravitational constant, G. It also involves a scalar
field, S, which is treated classically. In this paper we point out that a
classical treatment of S is inappropriate, because the Hamiltonian is
non-Hermitean, and the theory must be developed in the way pioneered by Bender
and others. When this is done, we arrive at a Hamiltonian with an energy
spectrum that is bounded below, and also a G that is positive. The resulting
theory closely resembles the conventional cosmology based on Einstein
relativity
Solution to the ghost problem in fourth order derivative theories
We present a solution to the ghost problem in fourth order derivative
theories. In particular we study the Pais-Uhlenbeck fourth order oscillator
model, a model which serves as a prototype for theories which are based on
second plus fourth order derivative actions. Via a Dirac constraint method
quantization we construct the appropriate quantum-mechanical Hamiltonian and
Hilbert space for the system. We find that while the second-quantized Fock
space of the general Pais-Uhlenbeck model does indeed contain the negative norm
energy eigenstates which are characteristic of higher derivative theories, in
the limit in which we switch off the second order action, such ghost states are
found to move off shell, with the spectrum of asymptotic in and out S-matrix
states of the pure fourth order theory which results being found to be
completely devoid of states with either negative energy or negative norm. We
confirm these results by quantizing the Pais-Uhlenbeck theory via path
integration and by constructing the associated first-quantized wave mechanics,
and show that the disappearance of the would-be ghosts from the energy
eigenspectrum in the pure fourth order limit is required by a hidden symmetry
that the pure fourth order theory is unexpectedly found to possess. The
occurrence of on-shell ghosts is thus seen not to be a shortcoming of pure
fourth order theories per se, but rather to be one which only arises when
fourth and second order theories are coupled to each other.Comment: 36 pages, revtex. Prepared for the proceedings of the 2006 Biennial
Meeting of the International Association for Relativistic Dynamics Version 2
contains an expanded discussion of the path integral quantization of the
Pais-Uhlenbeck fourth order oscillator theor
The democratic origins of the term "group analysis": Karl Mannheim's "third way" for psychoanalysis and social science.
It is well known that Foulkes acknowledged Karl Mannheim as the
first to use the term ‘group analysis’. However, Mannheim’s work is
otherwise not well known. This article examines the foundations of
Mannheim’s sociological interest in groups using the Frankfurt
School (1929–1933) as a start point through to the brief correspondence
of 1945 between Mannheim and Foulkes (previously
unpublished). It is argued that there is close conjunction between
Mannheim’s and Foulkes’s revision of clinical psychoanalysis along
sociological lines. Current renderings of the Frankfurt School
tradition pay almost exclusive attention to the American connection
(Herbert Marcuse, Eric Fromm, Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer)
overlooking the contribution of the English connection through
the work of Mannheim and Foulkes
Neutrinos from Gamma Ray Bursts
The observed fluxes of cosmic rays and gamma rays are used to infer the
maximum allowed high-energy neutrino flux allowed for Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs),
following Mannheim, Protheroe, and Rachen (2000). It is shown that if GRBs
produce the ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays, they should contribute (a) at least
10% of the extragalactic gamma ray background between 3 MeV and 30 GeV,
contrary to their observed energy flux which is only a minute fraction of this
flux, and (b) a cumulative neutrino flux a factor of 20 below the AMANDA
(Neutrino 2000) limit on isotropic neutrinos. This could have two implications,
either GRBs do not produce the ultrahigh energy cosmic rays or that the GRBs
are strongly beamed and emit most of their power at energies well above 100 GeV
implausibly increasing the energy requirements, but consistent with the
marginal detections of a few low-redshift GRBs by MILAGRITO, HEGRA-AIROBICC,
and the Tibet-Array. All crucial measurements to test the models will be
available in the next few years. These are measurements of (i) high-energy
neutrinos with AMANDA-ICECUBE or an enlarged ANTARES/NESTOR ocean detector,
(ii) GRB redshifts from HETE-2 follow-up studies, and (iii) GRB spectra above
10 GeV with low-threshold imaging air Cherenkov telescopes such as MAGIC and
the space telescopes AGILE and GLAST.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the Proc. of the Heidelberg
International Symposium on High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy, Heidelberg, June
26-30, 2000, ed. by H.J. Voelk and F. Aharonian, AIP Conf. Pro
Local and global gravity
Our long experience with Newtonian potentials has inured us to the view that
gravity only produces local effects. In this paper we challenge this quite
deeply ingrained notion and explicitly identify some intrinsically global
gravitational effects. In particular we show that the global cosmological
Hubble flow can actually modify the motions of stars and gas within individual
galaxies, and even do so in a way which can apparently eliminate the need for
galactic dark matter. Also we show that a classical light wave acquires an
observable, global, path dependent phase in traversing a gravitational field.
Both of these effects serve to underscore the intrinsic difference between
non-relativistic and relativistic gravity.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages plus three figures in two postscript files. To appear
in a special issue of Foundations of Physics honoring Professor Lawrence
Horwitz on the occasion of his 65th birthday; A. van der Merwe and S. Raby,
Editors, Plenum Publishing Company, N.Y., 199
- …