18,108 research outputs found
Chaos in an Exact Relativistic 3-body Self-Gravitating System
We consider the problem of three body motion for a relativistic
one-dimensional self-gravitating system. After describing the canonical
decomposition of the action, we find an exact expression for the 3-body
Hamiltonian, implicitly determined in terms of the four coordinate and momentum
degrees of freedom in the system. Non-relativistically these degrees of freedom
can be rewritten in terms of a single particle moving in a two-dimensional
hexagonal well. We find the exact relativistic generalization of this
potential, along with its post-Newtonian approximation. We then specialize to
the equal mass case and numerically solve the equations of motion that follow
from the Hamiltonian. Working in hexagonal-well coordinates, we obtaining
orbits in both the hexagonal and 3-body representations of the system, and plot
the Poincare sections as a function of the relativistic energy parameter . We find two broad categories of periodic and quasi-periodic motions that we
refer to as the annulus and pretzel patterns, as well as a set of chaotic
motions that appear in the region of phase-space between these two types.
Despite the high degree of non-linearity in the relativistic system, we find
that the the global structure of its phase space remains qualitatively the same
as its non-relativisitic counterpart for all values of that we could
study. However the relativistic system has a weaker symmetry and so its
Poincare section develops an asymmetric distortion that increases with
increasing . For the post-Newtonian system we find that it experiences a
KAM breakdown for : above which the near integrable regions
degenerate into chaos.Comment: latex, 65 pages, 36 figures, high-resolution figures available upon
reques
Exact Solution for the Metric and the Motion of Two Bodies in (1+1) Dimensional Gravity
We present the exact solution of two-body motion in (1+1) dimensional dilaton
gravity by solving the constraint equations in the canonical formalism. The
determining equation of the Hamiltonian is derived in a transcendental form and
the Hamiltonian is expressed for the system of two identical particles in terms
of the Lambert function. The function has two real branches which join
smoothly onto each other and the Hamiltonian on the principal branch reduces to
the Newtonian limit for small coupling constant. On the other branch the
Hamiltonian yields a new set of motions which can not be understood as
relativistically correcting the Newtonian motion. The explicit trajectory in
the phase space is illustrated for various values of the energy. The
analysis is extended to the case of unequal masses. The full expression of
metric tensor is given and the consistency between the solution of the metric
and the equations of motion is rigorously proved.Comment: 34 pages, LaTeX, 16 figure
Exact Black Hole and Cosmological Solutions in a Two-Dimensional Dilaton-Spectator Theory of Gravity
Exact black hole and cosmological solutions are obtained for a special
two-dimensional dilaton-spectator () theory of gravity. We show how
in this context any desired spacetime behaviour can be determined by an
appropriate choice of a dilaton potential function and a ``coupling
function'' in the action. We illustrate several black hole solutions
as examples. In particular, asymptotically flat double- and multiple- horizon
black hole solutions are obtained. One solution bears an interesting
resemblance to the string-theoretic black hole and contains the same
thermodynamic properties; another resembles the Reissner-Nordstrom
solution. We find two characteristic features of all the black hole solutions.
First the coupling constants in must be set equal to constants of
integration (typically the mass). Second, the spectator field and its
derivative both diverge at any event horizon. A test particle with
``spectator charge" ({\it i.e.} one coupled either to or ),
will therefore encounter an infinite tidal force at the horizon or an
``infinite potential barrier'' located outside the horizon respectively. We
also compute the Hawking temperature and entropy for our solutions. In
cosmology, two non-singular solutions which resemble two exact solutions
in string-motivated cosmology are obtained. In addition, we construct a
singular model which describes the standard non-inflationary big bang
cosmology (). Motivated by the
similaritiesbetween and gravitational field equations in
cosmology, we briefly discuss a special dilaton-spectator action
constructed from the bosonic part of the low energy heterotic string action andComment: 34 pgs. Plain Tex, revised version contains some clarifying comments
concerning the relationship between the constants of integration and the
coupling constants
Stability of Topological Black Holes
We explore the classical stability of topological black holes in
d-dimensional anti-de Sitter spacetime, where the horizon is an Einstein
manifold of negative curvature. According to the gauge invariant formalism of
Ishibashi and Kodama, gravitational perturbations are classified as being of
scalar, vector, or tensor type, depending on their transformation properties
with respect to the horizon manifold. For the massless black hole, we show that
the perturbation equations for all modes can be reduced to a simple scalar
field equation. This equation is exactly solvable in terms of hypergeometric
functions, thus allowing an exact analytic determination of potential
gravitational instabilities. We establish a necessary and sufficient condition
for stability, in terms of the eigenvalues of the Lichnerowicz
operator on the horizon manifold, namely . For the case
of negative mass black holes, we show that a sufficient condition for stability
is given by .Comment: 20 pages, Latex, v2 refined analysis of boundary conditions in
dimensions 4,5,6, additional reference
Combined electrical transport and capacitance spectroscopy of a field effect transistor
We have measured both the current-voltage (-)
and capacitance-voltage (-) characteristics of a
field effect transistor. From the measured capacitance
we calculate the electron surface density and show that its gate voltage
dependence follows the theoretical prediction resulting from the
two-dimensional free electron model. This model allows us to fit the measured
- characteristics over the \emph{entire range} of
. Combining this experimental result with the measured
current-voltage characteristics, we determine the field effect mobility as a
function of gate voltage. We show that for our device this improved combined
approach yields significantly smaller values (more than a factor of 4) of the
electron mobility than the conventional analysis of the current-voltage
characteristics only.Comment: to appear in Applied Physics Letter
von Neumann Lattices in Finite Dimensions Hilbert Spaces
The prime number decomposition of a finite dimensional Hilbert space reflects
itself in the representations that the space accommodates. The representations
appear in conjugate pairs for factorization to two relative prime factors which
can be viewed as two distinct degrees freedom. These, Schwinger's quantum
degrees of freedom, are uniquely related to a von Neumann lattices in the phase
space that characterizes the Hilbert space and specifies the simultaneous
definitions of both (modular) positions and (modular) momenta. The area in
phase space for each quantum state in each of these quantum degrees of freedom,
is shown to be exactly , Planck's constant.Comment: 16 page
Gravitational theory without the cosmological constant problem, symmetries of space-filling branes and higher dimensions
We showed that the principle of nongravitating vacuum energy, when formulated
in the first order formalism, solves the cosmological constant problem. The
most appealing formulation of the theory displays a local symmetry associated
with the arbitrariness of the measure of integration. This can be motivated by
thinking of this theory as a direct coupling of physical degrees of freedom
with a "space - filling brane" and in this case such local symmetry is related
to space-filling brane gauge invariance. The model is formulated in the first
order formalism using the metric and the connection as independent dynamical
variables. An additional symmetry (Einstein - Kaufman symmetry) allows to
eliminate the torsion which appears due to the introduction of the new measure
of integration. The most successful model that implements these ideas is
realized in a six or higher dimensional space-time. The compactification of
extra dimensions into a sphere gives the possibility of generating scalar
masses and potentials, gauge fields and fermionic masses. It turns out that
remaining four dimensional space-time must have effective zero cosmological
constant.Comment: 26 page
Decoherence of Hydrodynamic Histories: A Simple Spin Model
In the context of the decoherent histories approach to the quantum mechanics
of closed systems, Gell-Mann and Hartle have argued that the variables
typically characterizing the quasiclassical domain of a large complex system
are the integrals over small volumes of locally conserved densities --
hydrodynamic variables. The aim of this paper is to exhibit some simple models
in which approximate decoherence arises as a result of local conservation. We
derive a formula which shows the explicit connection between local conservation
and approximate decoherence. We then consider a class of models consisting of a
large number of weakly interacting components, in which the projections onto
local densities may be decomposed into projections onto one of two alternatives
of the individual components. The main example we consider is a one-dimensional
chain of locally coupled spins, and the projections are onto the total spin in
a subsection of the chain. We compute the decoherence functional for histories
of local densities, in the limit when the number of components is very large.
We find that decoherence requires two things: the smearing volumes must be
sufficiently large to ensure approximate conservation, and the local densities
must be partitioned into sufficiently large ranges to ensure protection against
quantum fluctuations.Comment: Standard TeX, 36 pages + 3 figures (postscript) Revised abstract and
introduction. To appear in Physical Review
Quantization of Fayet-Iliopoulos Parameters in Supergravity
In this short note we discuss quantization of the Fayet-Iliopoulos parameter
in supergravity theories. We argue that in supergravity, the Fayet-Iliopoulos
parameter determines a lift of the group action to a line bundle, and such
lifts are quantized. Just as D-terms in rigid N=1 supersymmetry are interpreted
in terms of moment maps and symplectic reductions, we argue that in
supergravity the quantization of the Fayet-Iliopoulos parameter has a natural
understanding in terms of linearizations in geometric invariant theory (GIT)
quotients, the algebro-geometric version of symplectic quotients.Comment: 21 pages, utarticle class; v2: typos and tex issue fixe
The Decuplet Revisited in PT
The paper deals with two issues. First, we explore the quantitiative
importance of higher multiplets for properties of the decuplet in
chiral perturbation theory. In particular, it is found that the lowest order
one--loop contributions from the Roper octet to the decuplet masses and
magnetic moments are substantial. The relevance of these results to the chiral
expansion in general is discussed. The exact values of the magnetic moments
depend upon delicate cancellations involving ill--determined coupling
constants. Second, we present new relations between the magnetic moments of the
decuplet that are independent of all couplings. They are exact at the
order of the chiral expansion used in this paper.Comment: 7 pages of double column revtex, no figure
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