1,643 research outputs found
The Gravitational Hamiltonian in the Presence of Non-Orthogonal Boundaries
This paper generalizes earlier work on Hamiltonian boundary terms by omitting
the requirement that the spacelike hypersurfaces intersect the
timelike boundary orthogonally. The expressions for the action and
Hamiltonian are calculated and the required subtraction of a background
contribution is discussed. The new features of a Hamiltonian formulation with
non-orthogonal boundaries are then illustrated in two examples.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX. The action is altered to include a corner
term which results in a different value for the non-orthogonal term. An
additional appendix with Euclidean results is included. To appear in Class.
Quant. Gra
Junctions and thin shells in general relativity using computer algebra I: The Darmois-Israel Formalism
We present the GRjunction package which allows boundary surfaces and
thin-shells in general relativity to be studied with a computer algebra system.
Implementing the Darmois-Israel thin shell formalism requires a careful
selection of definitions and algorithms to ensure that results are generated in
a straight-forward way. We have used the package to correctly reproduce a wide
variety of examples from the literature. We present several of these
verifications as a means of demonstrating the packages capabilities. We then
use GRjunction to perform a new calculation - joining two Kerr solutions with
differing masses and angular momenta along a thin shell in the slow rotation
limit.Comment: Minor LaTeX error corrected. GRjunction for GRTensorII is available
from http://astro.queensu.ca/~grtensor/GRjunction.htm
Stability of Transparent Spherically Symmetric Thin Shells and Wormholes
The stability of transparent spherically symmetric thin shells (and
wormholes) to linearized spherically symmetric perturbations about static
equilibrium is examined. This work generalizes and systematizes previous
studies and explores the consequences of including the cosmological constant.
The approach shows how the existence (or not) of a domain wall dominates the
landscape of possible equilibrium configurations.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, revtex. Final form to appear in Phys. Rev.
Lax pair tensors in arbitrary dimensions
A recipe is presented for obtaining Lax tensors for any n-dimensional
Hamiltonian system admitting a Lax representation of dimension n. Our approach
is to use the Jacobi geometry and coupling-constant metamorphosis to obtain a
geometric Lax formulation. We also exploit the results to construct integrable
spacetimes, satisfying the weak energy condition.Comment: 8 pages, uses IOP style files. Minor correction. Submitted to J. Phys
Double-bounce domain-wall in Einstein-Yang-Mills-Scalar black holes
We find Einstein-Yang-Mills (EYM) black hole solutions endowed with massless
scalar hair in the presence of a potential as function
of the scalar field . Choosing constant (or zero)
sets the scalar field to vanish leaving us with the EYM black holes. Our class
of black hole solutions is new so that they do not asymptote in general to any
known limits. Particular case is given, however, which admits an asymptotically
anti de Sitter limit in dimensional spacetime. The role of the potential
in making double bounces (i.e. both a minimum and
maximum radii) on a Domain Wall (DW) universe is highlighted.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, final version for publication in EPJ
Gravitational Collapse of Dust with a Cosmological Constant
The recent analysis of Markovic and Shapiro on the effect of a cosmological
constant on the evolution of a spherically symmetric homogeneous dust ball is
extended to include the inhomogeneous and degenerate cases. The histories are
shown by way of effective potential and Penrose-Carter diagrams.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures (png), revtex. To appear in Phys. Rev.
All static spherically symmetric perfect fluid solutions of Einstein's Equations
An algorithm based on the choice of a single monotone function (subject to
boundary conditions) is presented which generates all regular static
spherically symmetric perfect fluid solutions of Einstein's equations. For
physically relevant solutions the generating functions must be restricted by
non-trivial integral-differential inequalities. Nonetheless, the algorithm is
demonstrated here by the construction of an infinite number of previously
unknown physically interesting exact solutions.Comment: Final form to appear in Phys Rev D. Includes a number of
clarification
The Application of the Newman-Janis Algorithm in Obtaining Interior Solutions of the Kerr Metric
In this paper we present a class of metrics to be considered as new possible
sources for the Kerr metric. These new solutions are generated by applying the
Newman-Janis algorithm (NJA) to any static spherically symmetric (SSS) ``seed''
metric. The continuity conditions for joining any two of these new metrics is
presented. A specific analysis of the joining of interior solutions to the Kerr
exterior is made. The boundary conditions used are those first developed by
Dormois and Israel. We find that the NJA can be used to generate new physically
allowable interior solutions. These new solutions can be matched smoothly to
the Kerr metric. We present a general method for finding such solutions with
oblate spheroidal boundary surfaces. Finally a trial solution is found and
presented.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, 4 postscript figures. To be published in Classical
and Quantum Gravity. Title and abstract are now on the same pag
Superposition of Weyl solutions: The equilibrium forces
Solutions to the Einstein equation that represent the superposition of static
isolated bodies with axially symmetry are presented. The equations nonlinearity
yields singular structures (strut and membranes) to equilibrate the bodies. The
force on the strut like singularities is computed for a variety of situations.
The superposition of a ring and a particle is studied in some detailComment: 31 pages, 7 figures, psbox macro. Submitted to Classical and Quantum
Gravit
New measurement of the scattering cross section of slow neutrons on liquid parahydrogen from neutron transmission
Liquid hydrogen is a dense Bose fluid whose equilibrium properties are both
calculable from first principles using various theoretical approaches and of
interest for the understanding of a wide range of questions in many body
physics. Unfortunately, the pair correlation function inferred from
neutron scattering measurements of the differential cross section from different measurements reported in the literature are
inconsistent. We have measured the energy dependence of the total cross section
and the scattering cross section for slow neutrons with energies between
0.43~meV and 16.1~meV on liquid hydrogen at 15.6~K (which is dominated by the
parahydrogen component) using neutron transmission measurements on the hydrogen
target of the NPDGamma collaboration at the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak
Ridge National Laboratory. The relationship between the neutron transmission
measurement we perform and the total cross section is unambiguous, and the
energy range accesses length scales where the pair correlation function is
rapidly varying. At 1~meV our measurement is a factor of 3 below the data from
previous work. We present evidence that these previous measurements of the
hydrogen cross section, which assumed that the equilibrium value for the ratio
of orthohydrogen and parahydrogen has been reached in the target liquid, were
in fact contaminated with an extra non-equilibrium component of orthohydrogen.
Liquid parahydrogen is also a widely-used neutron moderator medium, and an
accurate knowledge of its slow neutron cross section is essential for the
design and optimization of intense slow neutron sources. We describe our
measurements and compare them with previous work.Comment: Edited for submission to Physical Review
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