473 research outputs found
Schwarzschild Geometry Emerging from Matrix Models
We demonstrate how various geometries can emerge from Yang-Mills type matrix
models with branes, and consider the examples of Schwarzschild and
Reissner-Nordstroem geometry. We provide an explicit embedding of these branes
in R^{2,5} and R^{4,6}, as well as an appropriate Poisson resp. symplectic
structure which determines the non-commutativity of space-time. The embedding
is asymptotically flat with asymptotically constant \theta^{\mu\nu} for large
r, and therefore suitable for a generalization to many-body configurations.
This is an illustration of our previous work arXiv:1003.4132, where we have
shown how the Einstein-Hilbert action can be realized within such matrix
models.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
And what if gravity is intrinsically quantic ?
Since the early days of search for a quantum theory of gravity the attempts
have been mostly concentrated on the quantization of an otherwise classical
system. The two most contentious candidate theories of gravity, sting theory
and quantum loop gravity are based on a quantum field theory - the latter is a
quantum field theory of connections on a SU(2) group manifold and former a
quantum field theory in two dimensional spaces. Here we argue that there is a
very close relation between quantum mechanics and gravity. Without gravity
quantum mechanics becomes ambiguous. We consider this observation as the
evidence for an intrinsic relation between these fundamental laws of nature. We
suggest a quantum role and definition for gravity in the context of a quantum
universe, and present a preliminary formulation for gravity in a system with a
finite number of particles.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure. To appear in the proceedings of the DICE2008
conference, Castiglioncello, Tuscany, Italy, 22-26 Sep. 2008. V2: some typos
remove
Gravity and compactified branes in matrix models
A mechanism for emergent gravity on brane solutions in Yang-Mills matrix
models is exhibited. Newtonian gravity and a partial relation between the
Einstein tensor and the energy-momentum tensor can arise from the basic matrix
model action, without invoking an Einstein-Hilbert-type term. The key
requirements are compactified extra dimensions with extrinsic curvature M^4 x K
\subset R^D and split noncommutativity, with a Poisson tensor \theta^{ab}
linking the compact with the noncompact directions. The moduli of the
compactification provide the dominant degrees of freedom for gravity, which are
transmitted to the 4 noncompact directions via the Poisson tensor. The
effective Newton constant is determined by the scale of noncommutativity and
the compactification. This gravity theory is well suited for quantization, and
argued to be perturbatively finite for the IKKT model. Since no
compactification of the target space is needed, it might provide a way to avoid
the landscape problem in string theory.Comment: 35 pages. V2: substantially revised and improved, conclusion
weakened. V3: some clarifications, published version. V4: minor correctio
Bubbles in galactic haloes
We briefly discuss a possible interconnection of vertical HI structures
observed in the Milky Way Galaxy with large scale blow-outs caused by the
explosions of multiple clustered SNe. We argue that the observed OB
associations can produce only about 60 such events, or approximately one
chimney per 3 kpc within the solar circle. We also discuss the overall
properties of HI shells in nearby face-on galaxies and the distribution of
H and dust in edge-on galaxies. We argue that the presence of dust in
galactic haloes may indicate that radiation pressure is the most probable
mechanism capable of transporting dust to large heights above the galactic
plane. In order to make this possible, the galactic magnetic field must have a
strong vertical component. We mention that SNe explosions can initiate the
Parker instability which in turn creates large scale magnetic loops with a
strong vertical component. Recent observations of nearby edge-on galaxies
favour this suggestion.Comment: 11 pages, 4 Figs, Talk at the JENAM, May 29 -- June 3, 2000, Mosco
Emergent Geometry and Quantum Gravity
We explain how quantum gravity can be defined by quantizing spacetime itself.
A pinpoint is that the gravitational constant G = L_P^2 whose physical
dimension is of (length)^2 in natural unit introduces a symplectic structure of
spacetime which causes a noncommutative spacetime at the Planck scale L_P. The
symplectic structure of spacetime M leads to an isomorphism between symplectic
geometry (M, \omega) and Riemannian geometry (M, g) where the deformations of
symplectic structure \omega in terms of electromagnetic fields F=dA are
transformed into those of Riemannian metric g. This approach for quantum
gravity allows a background independent formulation where spacetime as well as
matter fields is equally emergent from a universal vacuum of quantum gravity
which is thus dubbed as the quantum equivalence principle.Comment: Invited Review for Mod. Phys. Lett. A, 17 page
Emergent Geometry and Gravity from Matrix Models: an Introduction
A introductory review to emergent noncommutative gravity within Yang-Mills
Matrix models is presented. Space-time is described as a noncommutative brane
solution of the matrix model, i.e. as submanifold of \R^D. Fields and matter on
the brane arise as fluctuations of the bosonic resp. fermionic matrices around
such a background, and couple to an effective metric interpreted in terms of
gravity. Suitable tools are provided for the description of the effective
geometry in the semi-classical limit. The relation to noncommutative gauge
theory and the role of UV/IR mixing is explained. Several types of geometries
are identified, in particular "harmonic" and "Einstein" type of solutions. The
physics of the harmonic branch is discussed in some detail, emphasizing the
non-standard role of vacuum energy. This may provide new approach to some of
the big puzzles in this context. The IKKT model with D=10 and close relatives
are singled out as promising candidates for a quantum theory of fundamental
interactions including gravity.Comment: Invited topical review for Classical and Quantum Gravity. 57 pages, 5
figures. V2,V3: minor corrections and improvements. V4,V5: some improvements,
refs adde
The structured environments of embedded star-forming cores. PACS and SPIRE mapping of the enigmatic outflow source UYSO 1
The intermediate-mass star-forming core UYSO 1 has previously been found to
exhibit intriguing features. While deeply embedded and previously only
identified by means of its (sub-)millimeter emission, it drives two powerful,
dynamically young, molecular outflows. Although the process of star formation
has obviously started, the chemical composition is still pristine. We present
Herschel PACS and SPIRE continuum data of this presumably very young region.
The now complete coverage of the spectral energy peak allows us to precisely
constrain the elevated temperature of 26 - 28 K for the main bulge of gas
associated with UYSO1, which is located at the interface between the hot HII
region Sh 2-297 and the cold dark nebula LDN 1657A. Furthermore, the data
identify cooler compact far-infrared sources of just a few solar masses, hidden
in this neighbouring dark cloud.Comment: accepted contribution for the forthcoming Herschel Special Issue of
A&A, 5 pages (will appear as 4-page letter in the journal), 6 figure file
Matrix geometries and Matrix Models
We study a two parameter single trace 3-matrix model with SO(3) global
symmetry. The model has two phases, a fuzzy sphere phase and a matrix phase.
Configurations in the matrix phase are consistent with fluctuations around a
background of commuting matrices whose eigenvalues are confined to the interior
of a ball of radius R=2.0. We study the co-existence curve of the model and
find evidence that it has two distinct portions one with a discontinuous
internal energy yet critical fluctuations of the specific heat but only on the
low temperature side of the transition and the other portion has a continuous
internal energy with a discontinuous specific heat of finite jump. We study in
detail the eigenvalue distributions of different observables.Comment: 20 page
3D Continuum radiative transfer in complex dust configurations around young stellar objects and active nuclei II. 3D Structure of the dense molecular cloud core Rho Oph D
Constraints on the density and thermal 3D structure of the dense molecular
cloud core Rho Oph D are derived from a detailed 3D radiative transfer
modeling. Two ISOCAM images at 7 and 15 micron are fitted simultaneously by
representing the dust distribution in the core with a series of 3D Gaussian
density profiles. Size, total density, and position of the Gaussians are
optimized by simulated annealing to obtain a 2D column density map. The
projected core density has a complex elongated pattern with two peaks. We
propose a new method to calculate an approximate temperature in an externally
illuminated complex 3D structure from a mean optical depth. This T(tau)-method
is applied to a 1.3 mm map obtained with the IRAM 30m telescope to find the
approximate 3D density and temperature distribution of the core Rho Oph D. The
spatial 3D distribution deviates strongly from spherical symmetry. The
elongated structure is in general agreement with recent gravo-turbulent
collapse calculations for molecular clouds. We discuss possible ambiguities of
the background determination procedure, errors of the maps, the accuracy of the
T(tau)-method, and the influence of the assumed dust particle sizes and
properties.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figure
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