16 research outputs found

    Quaternionic Spin

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    We rewrite the standard 4-dimensional Dirac equation in terms of quaternionic 2-component spinors, leading to a formalism which treats both massive and massless particles on an equal footing. The resulting unified description has the correct particle spectrum to be a generation of leptons, with the correct number of spin/helicity states. Furthermore, precisely three such generations naturally combine into an octonionic description of the 10-dimensional massless Dirac equation, as discussed in previous work.Comment: LaTeX2e, 15 pages, 1 PS figure; to appear in Clifford '99 proceeding

    A New Look at the Ashtekar-Magnon Energy Condition

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    In 1975, Ashtekar and Magnon showed that an energy condition selects a unique quantization procedure for certain observers in general, curved spacetimes. We generalize this result in two important ways, by eliminating the need to assume a particular form for the (quantum) Hamiltonian, and by considering the surprisingly nontrivial extension to nonminimal coupling.Comment: REVTeX, 10 page

    Note on Signature Change and Colombeau Theory

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    Recent work alludes to various `controversies' associated with signature change in general relativity. As we have argued previously, these are in fact disagreements about the (often unstated) assumptions underlying various possible approaches. The choice between approaches remains open.Comment: REVTex, 3 pages; to appear in GR

    Distributional Modes for Scalar Field Quantization

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    We propose a mode-sum formalism for the quantization of the scalar field based on distributional modes, which are naturally associated with a slight modification of the standard plane-wave modes. We show that this formalism leads to the standard Rindler temperature result, and that these modes can be canonically defined on any Cauchy surface.Comment: 15 pages, RevTe

    The Rotating Quantum Vacuum

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    We derive conditions for rotating particle detectors to respond in a variety of bounded spacetimes and compare the results with the folklore that particle detectors do not respond in the vacuum state appropriate to their motion. Applications involving possible violations of the second law of thermodynamics are briefly addressed.Comment: Plain TeX, 10 pages (to appear in PRD

    DIMENSIONAL REDUCTION

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    The trousers problem revisited

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