3,871 research outputs found
Numerical simulation of the massive scalar field evolution in the Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole background
We studied the massive scalar wave propagation in the background of
Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole by using numerical simulations. We learned
that the value plays an important role in determining the properties of
the relaxation of the perturbation. For the relaxation process
depends only on the field parameter and does not depend on the spacetime
parameters. For , the dependence of the relaxation on the black hole
parameters appears. The bigger mass of the black hole, the faster the
perturbation decays. The difference of the relaxation process caused by the
black hole charge has also been exhibited.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Quasinormal modes for the SdS black hole : an analytical approximation scheme
Quasinormal modes for scalar field perturbations of a Schwarzschild-de Sitter
(SdS) black hole are investigated. An analytical approximation is proposed for
the problem. The quasinormal modes are evaluated for this approximate model in
the limit when black hole mass is much smaller than the radius of curvature of
the spacetime. The model mirrors some striking features observed in numerical
studies of time behaviour of scalar perturbations of the SdS black hole. In
particular, it shows the presence of two sets of modes relevant at two
different time scales, proportional to the surface gravities of the black hole
and cosmological horizons respectively. These quasinormal modes are not
complete - another feature observed in numerical studies. Refinements of this
model to yield more accurate quantitative agreement with numerical studies are
discussed. Further investigations of this model are outlined, which would
provide a valuable insight into time behaviour of perturbations in the SdS
spacetime.Comment: 12 pages, revtex, refs added and discussion expanded, version to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Scalar wave propagation in topological black hole backgrounds
We consider the evolution of a scalar field coupled to curvature in
topological black hole spacetimes. We solve numerically the scalar wave
equation with different curvature-coupling constant and show that a rich
spectrum of wave propagation is revealed when is introduced. Relations
between quasinormal modes and the size of different topological black holes
have also been investigated.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figure
Site multiplicity of rare earth ions in III-nitrides
This presentation reviews recent lattice location studies of RE ions in GaN by electron emission channelling (EC) and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) techniques. These studies agree that RE ions at low concentrations (whether they are incorporated during growth or introduced later by ion implantation) predominantly occupy Ga substitutional sites, as expected from considerations of charge equivalence. We combine this result with some examples of the welldocumented richness of optical spectra of GaN:RE3+ to suggest that the luminescence of these materials may be ascribed to a family of rather similar sites, all of which feature the REGa defect
Field propagation in de Sitter black holes
We present an exhaustive analysis of scalar, electromagnetic and
gravitational perturbations in the background of Schwarzchild-de Sitter and
Reissner-Nordstrom-de Sitter spacetimes. The field propagation is considered by
means of a semi-analytical (WKB) approach and two numerical schemes: the
characteristic and general initial value integrations. The results are compared
near the extreme cosmological constant regime, where analytical results are
presented. A unifying picture is established for the dynamics of different spin
fields.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures, published versio
EIS/Hinode observations of Doppler flow seen through the 40 arcsec wide slit
The Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) on board Hinode is the
first solar telescope to obtain wide slit spectral images that can be used for
detecting Doppler flows in transition region and coronal lines on the Sun and
to relate them to their surrounding small scale dynamics. We select EIS lines
covering the temperature range 6x10^4 K to 2x10^6 K that give spectrally pure
images of the Sun with the 40 arcsec slit. In these images Doppler shifts are
seen as horizontal brightenings. Inside the image it is difficult to
distinguish shifts from horizontal structures but emission beyond the image
edge can be unambiguously identified as a line shift in several lines separated
from others on their blue or red side by more than the width of the
spectrometer slit (40 pixels). In the blue wing of He II, we find a large
number of events with properties (size and lifetime) similar to the
well-studied explosive events seen in the ultraviolet spectral range.
Comparison with X-Ray Telescope (XRT) images shows many Doppler shift events at
the footpoints of small X-ray loops. The most spectacular event observed showed
a strong blue shift in transition region and lower corona lines from a small
X-ray spot that lasted less than 7 min. The emission appears to be near a cool
coronal loop connecting an X-ray bright point to an adjacent region of quiet
Sun. The width of the emission implies a line-of-sight velocity of 220 km/s. In
addition, we show an example of an Fe XV shift with a velocity about 120 km/s,
coming from what looks like a narrow loop leg connecting a small X-ray
brightening to a larger region of X-ray emission.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Solar Physic
Years of RXTE Monitoring of Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U 0142+61: Long-Term Variability
We report on 10 years of monitoring of the 8.7-s Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U
0142+61 using the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). This pulsar exhibited
stable rotation from 2000 March until 2006 February: the RMS phase residual for
a spin-down model which includes nu, nudot, and nuddot is 2.3%. We report a
possible phase-coherent timing solution valid over a 10-yr span extending back
to March 1996. A glitch may have occured between 1998 and 2000, but is not
required by the existing timing data. The pulse profile has been evolving since
2000. In particular, the dip of emission between its two peaks got shallower
between 2002 and 2006, as if the profile were evolving back to its pre-2000
morphology, following an earlier event, which possibly also included the glitch
suggested by the timing data. These profile variations are seen in the 2-4 keV
band but not in 6-8 keV. We also detect a slow increase in the pulsed flux
between 2002 May and 2004 December, such that it has risen by 36+/-3% over 2.6
years in the 2-10 keV band. The pulsed flux variability and the narrow-band
pulse profile changes present interesting challenges to aspects of the magnetar
model.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
Domain Wall Spacetimes: Instability of Cosmological Event and Cauchy Horizons
The stability of cosmological event and Cauchy horizons of spacetimes
associated with plane symmetric domain walls are studied. It is found that both
horizons are not stable against perturbations of null fluids and massless
scalar fields; they are turned into curvature singularities. These
singularities are light-like and strong in the sense that both the tidal forces
and distortions acting on test particles become unbounded when theses
singularities are approached.Comment: Latex, 3 figures not included in the text but available upon reques
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