2,827 research outputs found
Near-thermal radiation in detectors, mirrors, and black holes: A stochastic approach
In analyzing the nature of thermal radiance experienced by an accelerated observer (Unruh effect), an eternal black hole (Hawking effect) and in certain types of cosmological expansion, one of us proposed a unifying viewpoint that these can be understood as arising from the vacuum fluctuations of the quantum field being subjected to an exponential scale transformation. This viewpoint, together with our recently developed stochastic theory of particle-field interaction understood as quantum open systems described by the influence functional formalism, can be used to address situations where the spacetime possesses an event horizon only asymptotically, or none at all. Examples studied here include detectors moving at uniform acceleration only asymptotically or for a finite time, a moving mirror, and a collapsing mass. We show that in such systems radiance indeed is observed, albeit not in a precise Planckian spectrum. The deviation therefrom is determined by a parameter which measures the departure from uniform acceleration or from exact exponential expansion. These results are expected to be useful for the investigation of non-equilibrium black hole thermodynamics and the linear response regime of backreaction problems in semiclassical gravity.Alpan Raval, B. L. Hu, Don Kok
The Role of the Oxidising Agent and the Complexing Agent on Reactivity at Line Defects in Antimony
Thermal Particle Creation in Cosmological Spacetimes: A Stochastic Approach
The stochastic method based on the influence functional formalism introduced
in an earlier paper to treat particle creation in near-uniformly accelerated
detectors and collapsing masses is applied here to treat thermal and
near-thermal radiance in certain types of cosmological expansions. It is
indicated how the appearance of thermal radiance in different cosmological
spacetimes and in the two apparently distinct classes of black hole and
cosmological spacetimes can be understood under a unifying conceptual and
methodological framework.Comment: 17 pages, revtex (aps, eqsecnum), submitted to PRD, April 199
Uniformly Accelerated Charge in a Quantum Field: From Radiation Reaction to Unruh Effect
We present a stochastic theory for the nonequilibrium dynamics of charges
moving in a quantum scalar field based on the worldline influence functional
and the close-time-path (CTP or in-in) coarse-grained effective action method.
We summarize (1) the steps leading to a derivation of a modified
Abraham-Lorentz-Dirac equation whose solutions describe a causal semiclassical
theory free of runaway solutions and without pre-acceleration patholigies, and
(2) the transformation to a stochastic effective action which generates
Abraham-Lorentz-Dirac-Langevin equations depicting the fluctuations of a
particle's worldline around its semiclassical trajectory. We point out the
misconceptions in trying to directly relate radiation reaction to vacuum
fluctuations, and discuss how, in the framework that we have developed, an
array of phenomena, from classical radiation and radiation reaction to the
Unruh effect, are interrelated to each other as manifestations at the
classical, stochastic and quantum levels. Using this method we give a
derivation of the Unruh effect for the spacetime worldline coordinates of an
accelerating charge. Our stochastic particle-field model, which was inspired by
earlier work in cosmological backreaction, can be used as an analog to the
black hole backreaction problem describing the stochastic dynamics of a black
hole event horizon.Comment: Invited talk given by BLH at the International Assembly on
Relativistic Dynamics (IARD), June 2004, Saas Fee, Switzerland. 19 pages, 1
figur
Research and development work carried out on edible oysters in Gujarat
Oyster resources survey was conducted by
the transect method from Jakhau in the Gulf of
Kutch to Umargaon in south Gujarat. Crassostrea
gryphoides was dominant followed by Saccostrea
cucullata and C. rividari
Relation Between Einstein And Quantum Field Equations
We show that there exists a choice of scalar field modes, such that the
evolution of the quantum field in the zero-mass and large-mass limits is
consistent with the Einstein equations for the background geometry. This choice
of modes is also consistent with zero production of these particles and thus
corresponds to a preferred vacuum state preserved by the evolution. In the
zero-mass limit, we find that the quantum field equation implies the Einstein
equation for the scale factor of a radiation-dominated universe; in the
large-mass case, it implies the corresponding Einstein equation for a
matter-dominated universe. Conversely, if the classical radiation-dominated or
matter-dominated Einstein equations hold, there is no production of scalar
particles in the zero and large mass limits, respectively. The suppression of
particle production in the large mass limit is over and above the expected
suppression at large mass. Our results hold for a certain class of conformally
ultrastatic background geometries and therefore generalize previous results by
one of us for spatially flat Robertson-Walker background geometries. In these
geometries, we find that the temporal part of the graviton equations reduces to
the temporal equation for a massless minimally coupled scalar field, and
therefore the results for massless particle production hold also for gravitons.
Within the class of modes we study, we also find that the requirement of zero
production of massless scalar particles is not consistent with a non-zero
cosmological constant. Possible implications are discussed.Comment: Latex, 24 pages. Minor changes in text from original versio
Seeded crystallization of β-L-glutamic acid in a continuous oscillatory baffled crystallizer
A continuously seeded l-glutamic acid cooling crystallization process, in a continuous oscillatory baffled crystallizer, was designed and operated to deliver control over polymorphic form. Different feed solution concentrations and seed loadings of β-l-glutamic acid crystals were examined. Steady-state operation, based on particle size distribution and polymorphic form, was demonstrated consistently after two residence times. Where bulk supersaturation remained in the range 2–3, the polymorphic phase purity of the thermodynamically stable β polymorph was retained. However, when the bulk supersaturation exceeded this range to values of 3–8, primary nucleation of the metastable α polymorph was observed, and product crystals were a mixed phase. In the absence of seeding the system could not be operated without significant encrustation to the vessel surface thus leading to loss of control, whereas a continuously seeded approach allowed robust processing for at least 10 h
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