4,862 research outputs found
Metric Theory of Gravity with Torsion in an Extra Dimension
We consider a theory of gravity with a hidden extra dimension and metric-dependent torsion. A set of physically motivated constraints are imposed on the geometry so that the torsion stays confined to the extra dimension and the extra dimension stays hidden at the level of four-dimensional geodesic motion. At the kinematic level, the theory maps onto general relativity, but the dynamical field equations that follow from the action principle deviate markedly from the standard Einstein equations. We study static spherically symmetric vacuum solutions and homogeneous-isotropic cosmological solutions that emerge from the field equations. In both cases, we find solutions of significant physical interest. Most notably, we find positive mass solutions with naked singularity that match the well-known Schwarzschild solution at large distances but lack an event horizon. In the cosmological context, we find an oscillatory scenario, in contrast to the inevitable singular big bang of the standard cosmology
Metric Theory of Gravity with Torsion in an Extra Dimension
We consider a theory of gravity with a hidden extra dimension and metric-dependent torsion. A set of physically motivated constraints are imposed on the geometry so that the torsion stays confined to the extra dimension and the extra dimension stays hidden at the level of four-dimensional geodesic motion. At the kinematic level, the theory maps onto general relativity, but the dynamical field equations that follow from the action principle deviate markedly from the standard Einstein equations. We study static spherically symmetric vacuum solutions and homogeneous-isotropic cosmological solutions that emerge from the field equations. In both cases, we find solutions of significant physical interest. Most notably, we find positive mass solutions with naked singularity that match the well-known Schwarzschild solution at large distances but lack an event horizon. In the cosmological context, we find an oscillatory scenario, in contrast to the inevitable singular big bang of the standard cosmology
On the Stability and Single-Particle Properties of Bosonized Fermi Liquids
We study the stability and single-particle properties of Fermi liquids in
spatial dimensions greater than one via bosonization. For smooth non-singular
Fermi liquid interactions we obtain Shankar's renormalization- group flows and
reproduce well known results for quasi-particle lifetimes. We demonstrate by
explicit calculation that spin-charge separation does not occur when the Fermi
liquid interactions are regular. We also explore the relationship between
quantized bosonic excitations and zero sound modes and present a concise
derivation of both the spin and the charge collective mode equations. Finally
we discuss some aspects of singular Fermi liquid interactions.Comment: 13 pages plus three postscript figures appended; RevTex 3.0;
BUP-JBM-
Probing modified gravity with magnetically levitated resonators
We present an experimental procedure, based on Meissner effect levitation of neodymium ferromagnets, as a method of measuring the gravitational interactions between milligram masses. The scheme consists of two superconducting lead traps, with a magnet levitating in each trap. The levitating magnets behave as harmonic oscillators and, by carefully driving the motion of one magnet on resonance with the other, we find that it should easily be possible to measure the gravitational field produced by a 4 mg sphere, with the gravitational attraction from masses as small as 30 ÎĽg predicted to be measurable within a realistic measurement time frame. We apply this acceleration sensitivity to one concrete example and show the abilities of testing models of modified Newtonian dynamics
Exact SO(8) Symmetry in the Weakly-Interacting Two-Leg Ladder
A perturbative renormalization group analysis of interacting electrons on a
two-leg ladder reveals that at half-filling any weakly repulsive system scales
onto an exactly soluble Gross-Neveu model with a hidden SO(8) symmetry. The
half-filled ground state is a Mott insulator with short-range d-wave pair
correlations. We extract the exact energies, degeneracies, and quantum numbers
of *all* the low energy excited multiplets. One energy (mass) m octets contains
Cooper pair, magnon, and density-wave excitations, two more octets contain
single-particle excitations, and a mass \sqrt{3}m antisymmetric tensor contains
28 "bound states". Exact single-particle and spin gaps are found for the
lightly-doped (d-wave paired one-dimension Bose fluid) system. We also
determine the four other robust phases occuring at half-filling for partially
attractive interactions. All 5 phases have distinct SO(8) symmetries, but share
S.C. Zhang's SO(5) as a common subgroup.Comment: RevTex, 35 pages with 15 figure
Lowest Landau-level description of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a rapidly rotating anisotropic trap
A rapidly rotating Bose-Einstein condensate in a symmetric two-dimensional
trap can be described with the lowest Landau-level set of states. In this case,
the condensate wave function psi(x,y) is a Gaussian function of r^2 = x^2 +
y^2, multiplied by an analytic function P(z) of the single complex variable z=
x+ i y; the zeros of P(z) denote the positions of the vortices. Here, a similar
description is used for a rapidly rotating anisotropic two-dimensional trap
with arbitrary anisotropy (omega_x/omega_y le 1). The corresponding condensate
wave function psi(x,y) has the form of a complex anisotropic Gaussian with a
phase proportional to xy, multiplied by an analytic function P(zeta), where
zeta is proportional to x + i beta_- y and 0 le beta_- le 1 is a real parameter
that depends on the trap anisotropy and the rotation frequency. The zeros of
P(zeta) again fix the locations of the vortices. Within the set of lowest
Landau-level states at zero temperature, an anisotropic parabolic density
profile provides an absolute minimum for the energy, with the vortex density
decreasing slowly and anisotropically away from the trap center.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Dynamical Friction in a Gaseous Medium
Using time-dependent linear perturbation theory, we evaluate the dynamical
friction force on a massive perturber M_p traveling at velocity V through a
uniform gaseous medium of density rho_0 and sound speed c_s. This drag force
acts in the direction -\hat V, and arises from the gravitational attraction
between the perturber and its wake in the ambient medium. For supersonic motion
(M=V/c_s>1), the enhanced-density wake is confined to the Mach cone trailing
the perturber; for subsonic motion (M<1), the wake is confined to a sphere of
radius c_s t centered a distance V t behind the perturber. Inside the wake,
surfaces of constant density are hyperboloids or oblate spheroids for
supersonic or subsonic perturbers, respectively, with the density maximal
nearest the perturber. The dynamical drag force has the form F_df= - I 4\pi (G
M_p)^2\rho_0/V^2. We evaluate I analytically; its limits are I\to M^3/3 for
M>1. We compare our results to the
Chandrasekhar formula for dynamical friction in a collisionless medium, noting
that the gaseous drag is generally more efficient when M>1 but less efficient
when M<1. To allow simple estimates of orbit evolution in a gaseous protogalaxy
or proto-star cluster, we use our formulae to evaluate the decay times of a
(supersonic) perturber on a near-circular orbit in an isothermal \rho\propto
r^{-2} halo, and of a (subsonic) perturber on a near-circular orbit in a
constant-density core. We also mention the relevance of our calculations to
protoplanet migration in a circumstellar nebula.Comment: 17 pages, 5 postscript figures, to appear in ApJ 3/1/9
Quantal phases, disorder effects and superconductivity in spin-Peierls systems
In view of recent developments in the investigation on cuprate high-T superconductors and the spin-Peierls compound CuGeO, we study the
effect of dilute impurity doping on the spin-Peierls state in quasi-one
dimensional systems. We identify a common origin for the emergence of
antiferromagnetic order upon the introduction of static vacancies, and
superconductivity for mobile holes.Comment: 4 pages revtex; revised versio
Exactly Soluble Model for Umklapp Scattering at Quantum-Hall Edges
We consider the low-energy, long-wave-length excitations of a reconstructed
quantum-Hall edge where three branches of chiral one-dimensional edge
excitations exist. We find that, in addition to forward scattering between the
three edge-excitation branches, Coulomb interaction gives rise to a novel
Umklapp-type scattering process that cannot be accounted for within a
generalized Tomonaga-Luttinger model. We solve the theory including Umklapp
processes exactly in the long-wave-length limit and calculate electronic
correlation functions.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, final version, to appear in PRL (20Dec1999
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