9 research outputs found
Instabilities of one-dimensional stationary solutions of the cubic nonlinear Schrodinger equation
The two-dimensional cubic nonlinear Schrodinger equation admits a large
family of one-dimensional bounded traveling-wave solutions. All such solutions
may be written in terms of an amplitude and a phase. Solutions with piecewise
constant phase have been well studied previously. Some of these solutions were
found to be stable with respect to one-dimensional perturbations. No such
solutions are stable with respect to two-dimensional perturbations. Here we
consider stability of the larger class of solutions whose phase is dependent on
the spatial dimension of the one-dimensional wave form. We study the spectral
stability of such nontrivial-phase solutions numerically, using Hill's method.
We present evidence which suggests that all such nontrivial-phase solutions are
unstable with respect to both one- and two-dimensional perturbations.
Instability occurs in all cases: for both the elliptic and hyperbolic nonlinear
Schrodinger equations, and in the focusing and defocusing case.Comment: Submitted: 13 pages, 3 figure
Dynamical Vacuum in Quantum Cosmology
By regarding the vacuum as a perfect fluid with equation of state p=-rho, de
Sitter's cosmological model is quantized. Our treatment differs from previous
ones in that it endows the vacuum with dynamical degrees of freedom. Instead of
being postulated from the start, the cosmological constant arises from the
degrees of freedom of the vacuum regarded as a dynamical entity, and a time
variable can be naturally introduced. Taking the scale factor as the sole
degree of freedom of the gravitational field, stationary and wave-packet
solutions to the Wheeler-DeWitt equation are found. It turns out that states of
the Universe with a definite value of the cosmological constant do not exist.
For the wave packets investigated, quantum effects are noticeable only for
small values of the scale factor, a classical regime being attained at
asymptotically large times.Comment: Latex, 19 pages, to appear in Gen. Rel. Gra
