597 research outputs found
Awaking the vacuum with spheroidal shells
It has been shown that well-behaved spacetimes may induce the vacuum
fluctuations of some nonminimally coupled free scalar fields to go through a
phase of exponential growth. Here, we discuss this mechanism in the context of
spheroidal thin shells emphasizing the consequences of deviations from
spherical symmetry.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Minor changes, version published on Phys. Rev.
From quantum to classical instability in relativistic stars
It has been shown that gravitational fields produced by realistic
classical-matter distributions can force quantum vacuum fluctuations of some
nonminimally coupled free scalar fields to undergo a phase of exponential
growth. The consequences of this unstable phase to the background spacetime
have not been addressed so far due to known difficulties concerning
backreaction in semiclassical gravity. It seems reasonable to believe, however,
that the quantum fluctuations will "classicalize" when they become large
enough, after which backreaction can be treated in the general-relativistic
context. Here we investigate the emergence of a classical regime out of the
quantum field evolution during the unstable phase. By studying the appearance
of classical correlations and loss of quantum coherence, we show that by the
time backreaction becomes important the system already behaves classically.
Consequently, the gravity-induced instability leads naturally to initial
conditions for the eventual classical description of the backreaction. Our
results give support to previous analyses which treat classically the
instability of scalar fields in the spacetime of relativistic stars, regardless
whether the instability is triggered by classical or quantum perturbations.Comment: 16 pages. Minor changes to match the published versio
The Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey - VLT/VIMOS Spectroscopy in the GOODS-South Field: Part II
We present the full data set of the VIMOS spectroscopic campaign of the
ESO/GOODS program in the CDFS, which complements the FORS2 ESO/GOODS
spectroscopic campaign. The GOODS/VIMOS spectroscopic campaign is structured in
two separate surveys using two different VIMOS grisms. The VIMOS Low Resolution
Blue (LR-Blue) and Medium Resolution (MR) orange grisms have been used to cover
different redshift ranges. The LR-Blue campaign is aimed at observing galaxies
mainly at 1.8<z<3.5, while the MR campaign mainly aims at galaxies at z<1 and
Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) at z>3.5. The full GOODS/VIMOS spectroscopic
campaign consists of 20 VIMOS masks. This release adds 8 new masks to the
previous release (12 masks, Popesso et al. 2009). In total we obtained 5052
spectra, 3634 from the 10 LR-Blue masks and 1418 from the 10 MR masks. A
significant fraction of the extracted spectra comes from serendipitously
observed sources: ~21% in the LR-Blue and ~16% in the MR masks. We obtained
2242 redshifts in the LR-Blue campaign and 976 in the MR campaign for a total
success rate of 62% and 69% respectively, which increases to 66% and 73% if
only primary targets are considered. The typical redshift uncertainty is
estimated to be ~0.0012 (~255 km/s) for the LR-Blue grism and ~0.00040 (~120
km/s) for the MR grism. By complementing our VIMOS spectroscopic catalog with
all existing spectroscopic redshifts publicly available in the CDFS, we
compiled a redshift master catalog with 7332 entries, which we used to
investigate large scale structures out to z~3.7. We produced stacked spectra of
LBGs in a few bins of equivalent width (EW) of the Ly-alpha and found evidence
for a lack of bright LBGs with high EW of the Ly-alpha. Finally, we obtained
new redshifts for 12 X-ray sources of the CDFS and extended-CDFS.Comment: 22 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and
Astrophysics, catalogs and data products are available at
http://archive.eso.org/cms/eso-data/data-packages/goods-vimos-spectroscopy-data-release-version-2.0/,
for ESO-GOODS related material consult
http://www.eso.org/sci/activities/projects/goods
Free massive particles with total energy E < mc^2 in curved spacetimes
We analyze free elementary particles with rest mass and total energy in the Rindler wedge, outside Reissner-Nordstrom black holes and in the
spacetime of relativistic (and non-relativistic) stars, and use
Unruh-DeWitt-like detectors to calculate the associated particle detection rate
in each case. The (mean) particle position is identified with the spatial
average of the excitation probability of the detectors, which are supposed to
cover the whole space. Our results are shown to be in harmony with General
Relativity classical predictions. Eventually we reconcile our conclusions with
Earth-based experiments which are in good agreement with .Comment: 12 pages (REVTEX), 12 figure
Analytic Evaluation of the Decay Rate for Accelerated Proton
We evaluate the decay rate of the uniformly accelerated proton. We obtain an
analytic expression for inverse beta decay process caused by the acceleration.
We evaluate the decay rate both from the inertial frame and from the
accelerated frame where we should consider thermal radiation by Unruh effect.
We explicitly check that the decay rates obtained in both frame coincide with
each other.Comment: 11 page
The Fulling-Davies-Unruh Effect is Mandatory: The Proton's Testimony
We discuss the decay of accelerated protons and illustrate how the
Fulling-Davies-Unruh effect is indeed mandatory to maintain the consistency of
standard Quantum Field Theory. The confidence level of the Fulling-Davies-Unruh
effect must be the same as that of Quantum Field Theory itself.Comment: Awarded "honorable mention" by Gravity Research Foundation in the
2002 Essay competitio
Gravity-induced vacuum dominance
It has been widely believed that, except in very extreme situations, the
influence of gravity on quantum fields should amount to just small,
sub-dominant contributions. This view seemed to be endorsed by the seminal
results obtained over the last decades in the context of renormalization of
quantum fields in curved spacetimes. Here, however, we argue that this belief
is false by showing that there exist well-behaved spacetime evolutions where
the vacuum energy density of free quantum fields is forced, by the very same
background spacetime, to become dominant over any classical energy-density
component. This semiclassical gravity effect finds its roots in the infrared
behavior of fields on curved spacetimes. By estimating the time scale for the
vacuum energy density to become dominant, and therefore for backreaction on the
background spacetime to become important, we argue that this vacuum dominance
may bear unexpected astrophysical and cosmological implications.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett
The primordial environment of super massive black holes: large scale galaxy overdensities around QSOs with LBT
We investigated the presence of galaxy overdensities around four
QSOs, namely SDSS J1030+0524 (z = 6.28), SDSS J1148+5251 (z = 6.41), SDSS
J1048+4637 (z = 6.20) and SDSS J1411+1217 (z = 5.95), through deep -, -
and - band imaging obtained with the wide-field () Large
Binocular Camera (LBC) at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). We adopted
color-color selections within the vs plane to identify samples of
-band dropouts at the QSO redshift and measure their relative abundance and
spatial distribution in the four LBC fields, each covering
physical Mpc at . The same selection criteria were then applied to
-band selected sources in the 1 deg Subaru-XMM Newton Deep Survey
to derive the expected number of dropouts over a blank LBC-sized field
(0.14 deg). The four observed QSO fields host a number of candidates
larger than what is expected in a blank field. By defining as -band dropouts
objects with and undetected in the -band, we found
16, 10, 9, 12 dropouts in SDSS J1030+0524, SDSS J1148+5251, SDSS J1048+4637,
and SDSS J1411+1217, respectively, whereas only 4.3 such objects are expected
over a 0.14 deg blank field. This corresponds to overdensity significances
of 3.3, 1.9, 1.7, 2.5, respectively. By considering the total number of
dropouts in the four LBC fields and comparing it with what is expected in four
blank fields of 0.14 deg each, we find that high-z QSOs reside in overdense
environments at the level. This is the first direct and unambiguous
measurement of the large scale structures around QSOs. [shortened]Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
The Asiago-ESO/RASS QSO Survey II. The Southern Sample
This is the second paper of a series describing the Asiago-ESO/RASS QSO
survey, a project aimed at the construction of an all-sky statistically
well-defined sample of very bright QSOs (B_J < 15). Such a survey is required
to remove the present uncertainties about the properties of the local QSO
population and constitutes an homogeneous database for detailed evolutionary
studies of AGN. We present here the complete Southern Sample, which comprises
243 bright (12.60 < B_J < 15.13) QSO candidates at high galactic latitudes
(|b_{gal}| > 30^{\circ}). The area covered by the survey is 5660 sq. deg.
Spectroscopy for the 137 still unidentified objects has been obtained. The
total number of AGN turns out to be 111, 63 of which are new identifications.
The properties of the selection are discussed. The completeness and the success
rate for this survey at the final stage are 63% and 46%, respectively.Comment: 36 pages Latex, with 15 PostScript figures. Accepted for publication
in Astronomical Journa
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