539 research outputs found

    The Origin of the Electromagnetic Interaction in Einstein's Unified Field Theory with Sources

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    Einstein's unified field theory is extended by the addition of matter terms in the form of a symmetric energy tensor and of two conserved currents. From the field equations and from the conservation identities emerges the picture of a gravoelectrodynamics in a dynamically polarizable Riemannian continuum. Through an approximate calculation exploiting this dynamical polarizability it is argued that ordinary electromagnetism may be contained in the theory.Comment: 8 pages. Misprint in eq. 15 correcte

    "Violating'' Clauser-Horne inequalities within classical mechanics

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    Some authors have raised the question whether the probabilities stemming from a quantum mechanical computation are entitled to enter the Bell and the Clauser-Horne inequalities. They have remarked that if the quantum probabilities are given the status of conditional ones and the statistics for the various settings of the detectors in a given experiment is properly kept into account, the inequalities happen to be no longer violated. In the present paper a classical simile modeled after the quantum mechanical instances is closely scrutinised. It is shown that the neglect of the conditional character of the probabilities in the classical model leads not only to ``violate'' the Clauser-Horne inequalities, but also to contradict the very axioms of classical probability theory.Comment: 7 pages, 2 eps figure

    A four-dimensional Hooke's law can encompass linear elasticity and inertia

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    The question is examined, whether the formally straightforward extension of Hooke's time-honoured stress-strain relation to the four dimensions of special and of general relativity can make physical sense. The four-dimensional Hooke's law is found able to account for the inertia of matter; in the flat space, slow motion approximation the field equations for the ``displacement'' four-vector field can encompass both linear elasticity and inertia. In this limit one just recovers the equations of motion of the classical theory of elasticity.Comment: AMS LaTeX, 8 pages, Nuovo Cimento B (in press

    The issue of photons in dielectrics: Hamiltonian viewpoint

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    The definition of the photon in the vacuum of general relativity provided by Kermack et al. and by Synge is extended to nondispersive, nonhomogeneous, isotropic dielectrics in arbitrary motion by Hamiltonian methods that rely on Gordon's effective metric. By these methods the old dilemma, whether the momentum-energy vector of the photon in dielectrics is timelike or spacelike in character, is shown to reappear under a novel guise.Comment: 12 pages, one figure; text to appear in Nuovo Cimento

    One thing that general relativity says about photons in matter

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    Let us abandon for a moment the strict epistemological standpoint of quantum field theory, that eventually comes to declare nonsensical any question about the photon posed outside the quantum theoretical framework. We can then avail of the works by Whittaker et al. and by Synge about the particle and the wave model of the photon in the vacuum of general relativity. We can also rely on important results found by Gordon and by Pham Mau Quan: thanks to Gordon's discovery of an effective metric these authors have been able to reduce to the vacuum case several problems of the electromagnetic theory of dielectrics. The joint use of these old findings allows one to conclude that a quantum theoretical photon in an isotropic dielectric has a classical simile only if the dielectric is also homogeneous.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure. Text to appear in Nuovo Cimento
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