2,281 research outputs found

    Numerical solutions of differential equations

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    Various numerical methods for solving differential equations were analyzed and refined in an effort to develop a method which was adaptable to a large class of problems. The prime capabilities of the method included accuracy, numerical stability, and economic use of computer time. In multistep processes the corrector was changed at each step

    Predictor-corrector process in which the selection of an optimum corrector is made each step Quarterly technical report, oct. - Dec. 1965

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    Numerical solution of differential equations by predictor-corrector process which selects optimum corrector at each ste

    Classical and quantized aspects of dynamics in five dimensional relativity

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    A null path in 5D can appear as a timelike path in 4D, and for a certain gauge in 5D the motion of a massive particle in 4D obeys the usual quantization rule with an uncertainty-type relation. Generalizations of this result are discussed in regard to induced-matter and membrane theory.Comment: 26 pages, in press in Class. Quant. Gra

    The bang of a white hole in the early universe from a 6D vacuum state: Origin of astrophysical spectrum

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    Using a previously introduced model in which the expansion of the universe is driven by a single scalar field subject to gravitational attraction induced by a white hole during the expansion (from a 6D vacuum state), we study the origin of squared inflaton fluctuations spectrum on astrophysical scales.Comment: Final version to be published in Eur. Phys. J.

    An exact solution of the five-dimensional Einstein equations with four-dimensional de Sitter-like expansion

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    We present an exact solution to the Einstein field equations which is Ricci and Riemann flat in five dimensions, but in four dimensions is a good model for the early vacuum-dominated universe.Comment: 6 pages; to appear in Journal of Mathematical Physics; v2: reference 3 correcte

    Quantum cosmology of 5D non-compactified Kaluza-Klein theory

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    We study the quantum cosmology of a five dimensional non-compactified Kaluza-Klein theory where the 4D metric depends on the fifth coordinate, x4lx^4\equiv l. This model is effectively equivalent to a 4D non-minimally coupled dilaton field in addition to matter generated on hypersurfaces l=constant by the extra coordinate dependence in the four-dimensional metric. We show that the Vilenkin wave function of the universe is more convenient for this model as it predicts a new-born 4D universe on the l0l\simeq0 constant hypersurface.Comment: 14 pages, LaTe

    Cosmological Implications of a Non-Separable 5D Solution of the Vacuum Einstein Field Equations

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    An exact class of solutions of the 5D vacuum Einstein field equations (EFEs) is obtained. The metric coefficients are found to be non-separable functions of time and the extra coordinate ll and the induced metric on ll = constant hypersurfaces has the form of a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmology. The 5D manifold and 3D and 4D submanifolds are in general curved, which distinguishes this solution from previous ones in the literature. The singularity structure of the manifold is explored: some models in the class do not exhibit a big bang, while other exhibit a big bang and a big crunch. For the models with an initial singularity, the equation of state of the induced matter evolves from radiation like at early epochs to Milne-like at late times and the big bang manifests itself as a singular hypersurface in 5D. The projection of comoving 5D null geodesics onto the 4D submanifold is shown to be compatible with standard 4D comoving trajectories, while the expansion of 5D null congruences is shown to be in line with conventional notions of the Hubble expansion.Comment: 8 pages, in press in J. Math. Phy

    Wave Mechanics and General Relativity: A Rapprochement

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    Using exact solutions, we show that it is in principle possible to regard waves and particles as representations of the same underlying geometry, thereby resolving the problem of wave-particle duality

    FLRW Universes from "Wave-Like" Cosmologies in 5D

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    We consider the evolution of a 4D-universe embedded in a five-dimensional (bulk) world with a large extra dimension and a cosmological constant. The cosmology in 5D possesses "wave-like" character in the sense that the metric coefficients in the bulk are functions of the extra coordinate and time in a way similar to a pulse or traveling wave propagating along the fifth dimension. This assumption is motivated by some recent work presenting the big-bang as a higher dimensional shock wave. We show that this assumption, together with an equation of state for the effective matter quantities in 4D, allows Einstein's equations to be fully integrated. We then recover the familiar FLRW universes, on the four-dimensional hypersurfaces orthogonal to the extra dimension. Regarding the extra dimension we find that it is {\em growing} in size if the universe is speeding up its expansion. We also get an estimate for the relative change of the extra dimension over time. This estimate could have important observational implications, notably for the time variation of rest mass, electric charge and the gravitational "constant". Our results extend previous ones in the literature.Comment: Few comments added, references updated. To appear in Int. J. of Mod. Phys.

    Extra symmetry in the field equations in 5D with spatial spherical symmetry

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    We point out that the field equations in 5D, with spatial spherical symmetry, possess an extra symmetry that leaves them invariant. This symmetry corresponds to certain simultaneous interchange of coordinates and metric coefficients. As a consequence a single solution in 5D can generate very different scenarios in 4D, ranging from static configurations to cosmological situations. A new perspective emanates from our work. Namely, that different astrophysical and cosmological scenarios in 4D might correspond to the same physics in 5D. We present explicit examples that illustrate this point of view.Comment: Typos corrected. Accepted for publication in Classical and Quantum Gravit
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