39,855 research outputs found

    Some Implications of the Cosmological Constant to Fundamental Physics

    Get PDF
    In the presence of a cosmological constant, ordinary Poincare' special relativity is no longer valid and must be replaced by a de Sitter special relativity, in which Minkowski space is replaced by a de Sitter spacetime. In consequence, the ordinary notions of energy and momentum change, and will satisfy a different kinematic relation. Such a theory is a different kind of a doubly special relativity. Since the only difference between the Poincare' and the de Sitter groups is the replacement of translations by certain linear combinations of translations and proper conformal transformations, the net result of this change is ultimately the breakdown of ordinary translational invariance. From the experimental point of view, therefore, a de Sitter special relativity might be probed by looking for possible violations of translational invariance. If we assume the existence of a connection between the energy scale of an experiment and the local value of the cosmological constant, there would be changes in the kinematics of massive particles which could hopefully be detected in high-energy experiments. Furthermore, due to the presence of a horizon, the usual causal structure of spacetime would be significantly modified at the Planck scale.Comment: 15 pages, lecture presented at the "XIIth Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation", Mangaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, September 10-23, 200

    Cosmological Term and Fundamental Physics

    Full text link
    A nonvanishing cosmological term in Einstein's equations implies a nonvanishing spacetime curvature even in absence of any kind of matter. It would, in consequence, affect many of the underlying kinematic tenets of physical theory. The usual commutative spacetime translations of the Poincare' group would be replaced by the mixed conformal translations of the de Sitter group, leading to obvious alterations in elementary concepts such as time, energy and momentum. Although negligible at small scales, such modifications may come to have important consequences both in the large and for the inflationary picture of the early Universe. A qualitative discussion is presented which suggests deep changes in Hamiltonian, Quantum and Statistical Mechanics. In the primeval universe as described by the standard cosmological model, in particular, the equations of state of the matter sources could be quite different from those usually introduced.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages. Selected for Honorable Mention in the Annual Essay Competition of the Gravity Research Foundation for the year 200

    Improved Transverse Crack Detection in Composites

    Get PDF
    A modified ultrasonic C-scan technique was implemented for improving the detection of a certain type of damage in composite specimens. The type of damage being studied is transverse (through the thickness) cracking of unidirectional off-axis graphite-epoxy specimens. These cracks are difficult to detect using standard through-transmission C-scan techniques. The modification is based on mode conversion to produce transmitted shear waves from incident longitudinal waves. While mode conversion is used extensively with isotropic materials, its use with composites is more limited. This is largely because the computation of wave propagation parameters is significantly more complicated with highly anisotropic materials than with isotropic materials. The appropriate incident angles to produce the desired mode conversion were computed based on the mechanical properties of the composite. Once the angles were computed the technique was simple to implement and resulted in marked improvement in detection of the transverse cracks being studied

    Gravity and the Quantum: Are they Reconcilable?

    Full text link
    General relativity and quantum mechanics are conflicting theories. The seeds of discord are the fundamental principles on which these theories are grounded. General relativity, on one hand, is based on the equivalence principle, whose strong version establishes the local equivalence between gravitation and inertia. Quantum mechanics, on the other hand, is fundamentally based on the uncertainty principle, which is essentially nonlocal in the sense that a particle does not follow one trajectory, but infinitely many trajectories, each one with a different probability. This difference precludes the existence of a quantum version of the strong equivalence principle, and consequently of a quantum version of general relativity. Furthermore, there are compelling experimental evidences that a quantum object in the presence of a gravitational field violates the weak equivalence principle. Now it so happens that, in addition to general relativity, gravitation has an alternative, though equivalent description, given by teleparallel gravity, a gauge theory for the translation group. In this theory torsion, instead of curvature, is assumed to represent the gravitational field. These two descriptions lead to the same classical results, but are conceptually different. In general relativity, curvature geometrizes the interaction, while torsion in teleparallel gravity acts as a force, similar to the Lorentz force of electrodynamics. Because of this peculiar property, teleparallel gravity describes the gravitational interaction without requiring any of the equivalence principles. The replacement of general relativity by teleparallel gravity may, in consequence, lead to a conceptual reconciliation of gravitation with quantum mechanics.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures. Talk presented at the conference "Quantum Theory: Reconsideration of Foundations-3", June 6-11, 2005, Vaxjo University, Vaxjo, Swede
    corecore