656 research outputs found

    Classical Black Hole Production In Quantum Particle Collisions

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    The semiclassical picture of black hole production in trans-Planckian elementary particle collisions is reviewed.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures; talk given at the 6th Alexander Friedmann International Seminar on Gravitation and Cosmology, Cargese, France, June 28-July 3, 2004; to appear in the proceedings (Int.J.Mod.Phys.A); v2: typos correcte

    A Relativistic Description of Gentry's New Redshift Interpretation

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    We obtain a new expression of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric, which is an analogue of a static chart of the de Sitter space-time. The reduced metric contains two functions, M(T,R)M(T,R) and Ψ(T,R)\Psi(T,R), which are interpreted as, respectively, the mass function and the gravitational potential. We find that, near the coordinate origin, the reduced metric can be approximated in a static form and that the approximated metric function, Ψ(R)\Psi(R), satisfies the Poisson equation. Moreover, when the model parameters of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric are suitably chosen, the approximated metric coincides with exact solutions of the Einstein equation with the perfect fluid matter. We then solve the radial geodesics on the approximated space-time to obtain the distance-redshift relation of geodesic sources observed by the comoving observer at the origin. We find that the redshift is expressed in terms of a peculiar velocity of the source and the metric function, Ψ(R)\Psi(R), evaluated at the source position, and one may think that this is a new interpretation of {\it Gentry's new redshift interpretation}.Comment: 11 pages. Submitted to Modern Physics Letters

    The role of the quantum properties of gravitational radiation in the dete ction of gravitational waves

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    The role that the quantum properties of a gravitational wave could play in the detection of gravitational radiation is analyzed. It is not only corroborated that in the current laser-interferometric detectors the resolution of the experimental apparatus could lie very far from the corresponding quantum threshold (thus the backreaction effect of the measuring device upon the gravitational wave is negligible), but it is also suggested that the consideration of the quantum properties of the wave could entail the definition of dispersion of the measurement outputs. This dispersion would be a function not only of the sensitivity of the measuring device, but also of the interaction time (between measuring device and gravitational radiation) and of the arm length of the corresponding laser- interferometer. It would have a minimum limit, and the introduction of the current experimental parameters insinuates that the dispersion of the existing proposals could lie very far from this minimum, which means that they would show a very large dispersion.Comment: 19 pages, Latex (use epsfig.sty

    Gamma-ray bursts as the birth-cries of black holes

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    The origin of cosmic gamma-ray bursts remains one of the most intriguing puzzles in astronomy. We suggest that purely general relativistic effects in the collapse of massive stars could account for these bursts. The late formation of closed trapped surfaces can occur naturally, allowing the escape of huge energy from curvature-generated fireballs, before these are hidden within a black hole.Comment: 4 pages Revtex, 1 figure. This essay received an honorable mention in the Gravity Research Foundation essay competitio

    Nonlinear wave equations for relativity

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    Graviational radiation is described by canonical Yang-Mills wave equations on the curved space-time manifold, together with evolution equations for the metric in the tangent bundle. The initial data problem is described in Yang-Mills scalar and vector potentials, resulting in Lie-constraints in addition to the familiar Gauss-Codacci relations

    On the Nature of Singularities in Plane Symmetric Scalar Field Cosmologies

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    The nature of the initial singularity in spatially compact plane symmetric scalar field cosmologies is investigated. It is shown that this singularity is crushing and velocity dominated and that the Kretschmann scalar diverges uniformly as it is approached. The last fact means in particular that a maximal globally hyperbolic spacetime in this class cannot be extended towards the past through a Cauchy horizon. A subclass of these spacetimes is identified for which the singularity is isotropic.Comment: 7 pages, MPA-AR-94-

    Observation of critical phenomena and self-similarity in the gravitational collapse of radiation fluid

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    We observe critical phenomena in spherical collapse of radiation fluid. A sequence of spacetimes S[η]\cal{S}[\eta] is numerically computed, containing models (η1\eta\ll 1) that adiabatically disperse and models (η1\eta\gg 1) that form a black hole. Near the critical point (ηc\eta_c), evolutions develop a self-similar region within which collapse is balanced by a strong, inward-moving rarefaction wave that holds m(r)/rm(r)/r constant as a function of a self-similar coordinate ξ\xi. The self-similar solution is known and we show near-critical evolutions asymptotically approaching it. A critical exponent β0.36\beta \simeq 0.36 is found for supercritical (η>ηc\eta>\eta_c) models.Comment: 10 pages (LaTeX) (to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett.), TAR-039-UN

    Black Hole Criticality in the Brans-Dicke Model

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    We study the collapse of a free scalar field in the Brans-Dicke model of gravity. At the critical point of black hole formation, the model admits two distinctive solutions dependent on the value of the coupling parameter. We find one solution to be discretely self-similar and the other to exhibit continuous self-similarity.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 5 figures include
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