70 research outputs found
Over the Rainbow: Numerical Relativity beyond Scri+
This is a study of the behavior of wave equations in conformally compactified
spacetimes suited to the use of computational boundaries beyond Scri+. There
light cones may be adjusted for computational convenience and/or Scri+ may be
approximated by a "proto-Scri" spacelike hypersurface just outside a de Sitter
horizon. One expects a numerical implementation to excise the physically
unnecessary universe somewhat beyond the outer horizon. As an entry level
example I study forms of the Maxwell equations and causal relations for an
outer boundary in that example.Comment: 5 pages, no figures; added acknowledgements and references in v
Spherical Harmonic Decomposition on a Cubic Grid
A method is described by which a function defined on a cubic grid (as from a
finite difference solution of a partial differential equation) can be resolved
into spherical harmonic components at some fixed radius. This has applications
to the treatment of boundary conditions imposed at radii larger than the size
of the grid, following Abrahams, Rezzola, Rupright et al.(gr-qc/9709082}. In
the method described here, the interpolation of the grid data to the
integration 2-sphere is combined in the same step as the integrations to
extract the spherical harmonic amplitudes, which become sums over grid points.
Coordinates adapted to the integration sphere are not needed.Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX uses cjour.cls (supplied
The bigravity black hole and its thermodynamics
We argue that the Isham-Storey exact solution to bigravity does not describe
black holes because the horizon is a singular surface. However, this is not a
generic property of bigravity, but a property of a particular potential. More
general potentials do accept regular black holes. For regular black holes, we
compute the total energy and thermodynamical parameters. Phase transitions
occur for certain critical temperatures. We also find a novel region on phase
space describing up to 4 allowed states for a given temperature.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
John Wheeler, relativity, and quantum information
In spring 1952, as John Wheeler neared the end of design work for the first thermonuclear explosion, he plotted a radical change of research direction: from particles and atomic nuclei to general relativity
Excising das All: Evolving Maxwell waves beyond scri
We study the numerical propagation of waves through future null infinity in a
conformally compactified spacetime. We introduce an artificial cosmological
constant, which allows us some control over the causal structure near null
infinity. We exploit this freedom to ensure that all light cones are tilted
outward in a region near null infinity, which allows us to impose
excision-style boundary conditions in our finite difference code. In this
preliminary study we consider electromagnetic waves propagating in a static,
conformally compactified spacetime.Comment: 13 pages; incorporated material from gr-qc/051216
Time (in)dependence in general relativity
We clarify the conditions for Birkhoff's theorem, that is, time-independence
in general relativity. We work primarily at the linearized level where guidance
from electrodynamics is particularly useful. As a bonus, we also derive the
equivalence principle. The basic time-independent solutions due to
Schwarzschild and Kerr provide concrete illustrations of the theorem. Only
familiarity with Maxwell's equations and tensor analysis is required.Comment: Revised version of originally titled "Kinder Kerr", to appear in
American Journal of Physic
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