500 research outputs found
Coadjoint Orbits, Spin and Dequantization
In this Letter we propose two path integral approaches to describe the
classical mechanics of spinning particles. We show how these formulations can
be derived from the associated quantum ones via a sort of geometrical
dequantization procedure proposed in a previous paper.Comment: 13 pages, Latex, title change
Explaining Leibniz-equivalence as difference of non-inertial appearances: dis-solution of the Hole Argument and physical individuation of point-events
"The last remnant of physical objectivity of space-time" is disclosed in the
case of a continuous family of spatially non-compact models of general
relativity (GR). The {\it physical individuation} of point-events is furnished
by the intrinsic degrees of freedom of the gravitational field, (viz, the {\it
Dirac observables}) that represent - as it were - the {\it ontic} part of the
metric field. The physical role of the {\it epistemic} part (viz. the {\it
gauge} variables) is likewise clarified as emboding the unavoidable
non-inertial aspects of GR. At the end the philosophical import of the {\it
Hole Argument} is substantially weakened and in fact the Argument itself
dis-solved, while a specific four-dimensional {\it holistic and structuralist}
view of space-time, (called {\it point-structuralism}), emerges, including
elements common to the tradition of both {\it substantivalism} and {\it
relationism}. The observables of our models undergo real {\it temporal change}:
this gives new evidence to the fact that statements like the {\it frozen-time}
character of evolution, as other ontological claims about GR, are {\it model
dependent}. \medskip Forthcoming in Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern
PhysicsComment: 37 pages, talk at Oxford Conference on Spacetime (2004), to appear in
Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics. Affiliations Correcte
The Physical Role of Gravitational and Gauge Degrees of Freedom in General Relativity - I: Dynamical Synchronization and Generalized Inertial Effects
This is the first of a couple of papers in which, by exploiting the
capabilities of the Hamiltonian approach to general relativity, we get a number
of technical achievements that are instrumental both for a disclosure of
\emph{new} results concerning specific issues, and for new insights about
\emph{old} foundational problems of the theory. The first paper includes: 1) a
critical analysis of the various concepts of symmetry related to the
Einstein-Hilbert Lagrangian viewpoint on the one hand, and to the Hamiltonian
viewpoint, on the other. This analysis leads, in particular, to a
re-interpretation of {\it active} diffeomorphisms as {\it passive and
metric-dependent} dynamical symmetries of Einstein's equations, a
re-interpretation which enables to disclose the (nearly unknown) connection of
a subgroup of them to Hamiltonian gauge transformations {\it on-shell}; 2) a
re-visitation of the canonical reduction of the ADM formulation of general
relativity, with particular emphasis on the geometro-dynamical effects of the
gauge-fixing procedure, which amounts to the definition of a \emph{global
(non-inertial) space-time laboratory}. This analysis discloses the peculiar
\emph{dynamical nature} that the traditional definition of distant simultaneity
and clock-synchronization assume in general relativity, as well as the {\it
gauge relatedness} of the "conventions" which generalize the classical
Einstein's convention.Comment: 45 pages, Revtex4, some refinements adde
Ephemeral point-events: is there a last remnant of physical objectivity?
For the past two decades, Einstein's Hole Argument (which deals with the
apparent indeterminateness of general relativity due to the general covariance
of the field equations) and its resolution in terms of Leibniz equivalence (the
statement that Riemannian geometries related by active diffeomorphisms
represent the same physical solution) have been the starting point for a lively
philosophical debate on the objectivity of the point-events of space-time. It
seems that Leibniz equivalence makes it impossible to consider the points of
the space-time manifold as physically individuated without recourse to
dynamical individuating fields. Various authors have posited that the metric
field itself can be used in this way, but nobody so far has considered the
problem of explicitly distilling the metrical fingerprint of point-events from
the gauge-dependent components of the metric field. Working in the Hamiltonian
formulation of general relativity, and building on the results of Lusanna and
Pauri (2002), we show how Bergmann and Komar's intrinsic pseudo-coordinates
(based on the value of curvature invariants) can be used to provide a physical
individuation of point-events in terms of the true degrees of freedom (the
Dirac observables) of the gravitational field, and we suggest how this
conceptual individuation could in principle be implemented with a well-defined
empirical procedure. We argue from these results that point-events retain a
significant kind of physical objectivity.Comment: LaTeX, natbib, 34 pages. Final journal versio
Marzke-Wheeler coordinates for accelerated observers in special relativity
In special relativity, the definition of coordinate systems adapted to
generic accelerated observers is a long-standing problem, which has found
unequivocal solutions only for the simplest motions. We show that the
Marzke-Wheeler construction, an extension of the Einstein synchronization
convention, produces accelerated systems of coordinates with desirable
properties: (a) they reduce to Lorentz coordinates in a neighborhood of the
observers' world-lines; (b) they index continuously and completely the causal
envelope of the world-line (that is, the intersection of its causal past and
its causal future: for well-behaved world-lines, the entire space-time). In
particular, Marzke-Wheeler coordinates provide a smooth and consistent
foliation of the causal envelope of any accelerated observer into space-like
surfaces.
We compare the Marzke-Wheeler procedure with other definitions of accelerated
coordinates; we examine it in the special case of stationary motions, and we
provide explicit coordinate transformations for uniformly accelerated and
uniformly rotating observers. Finally, we employ the notion of Marzke-Wheeler
simultaneity to clarify the relativistic paradox of the twins, by pinpointing
the local origin of differential aging.Comment: AmsLaTeX, 22 pages, 8 eps figures; revised, references added. To
appear in Foundations of Physics Letters, October 200
New Directions in Non-Relativistic and Relativistic Rotational and Multipole Kinematics for N-Body and Continuous Systems
In non-relativistic mechanics the center of mass of an isolated system is
easily separated out from the relative variables. For a N-body system these
latter are usually described by a set of Jacobi normal coordinates, based on
the clustering of the centers of mass of sub-clusters. The Jacobi variables are
then the starting point for separating {\it orientational} variables, connected
with the angular momentum constants of motion, from {\it shape} (or {\it
vibrational}) variables. Jacobi variables, however, cannot be extended to
special relativity. We show by group-theoretical methods that two new sets of
relative variables can be defined in terms of a {\it clustering of the angular
momenta of sub-clusters} and directly related to the so-called {\it dynamical
body frames} and {\it canonical spin bases}. The underlying group-theoretical
structure allows a direct extension of such notions from a non-relativistic to
a special- relativistic context if one exploits the {\it rest-frame instant
form of dynamics}. The various known definitions of relativistic center of mass
are recovered. The separation of suitable relative variables from the so-called
{\it canonical internal} center of mass leads to the correct kinematical
framework for the relativistic theory of the orbits for a N-body system with
action -at-a-distance interactions. The rest-frame instant form is also shown
to be the correct kinematical framework for introducing the Dixon multi-poles
for closed and open N-body systems, as well as for continuous systems,
exemplified here by the configurations of the Klein-Gordon field that are
compatible with the previous notions of center of mass.Comment: Latex, p.75, Invited contribution for the book {\it Atomic and
Molecular Clusters: New Research} (Nova Science
Agency Reform in the time of Cybersecurity Governance: ENISA
L\u2019Agenzia Europea per la sicurezza delle reti e dell\u2019informazione (ENISA) ha
recentemente ricevuto dal Mediatore Europeo il premio per la Buona Amministrazione
\u201cEccellenza nell\u2019Innovazione\u201d, in virt\uf9 del suo progetto dedicato alla ridefinizione della
cooperazione europea nel settore della sicurezza informatica.
Tuttavia, nonostante i notevoli risultati raggiunti in termini di qualit\ue0 dell\u2019output, in
appena tredici anni di vigenza ENISA \ue8 stata soggetta a molteplici riforme che hanno
modificato il suo regolamento istitutivo. Inoltre, ENISA \ue8 oggi soggetta ad un ulteriore
processo di riforma. Alla luce dei risultati ottenuti dalla consultazione pubblica lanciata
dalla Commissione Europea nel 2017, il presente articolo si occuper\ue0 dell\u2019impatto che il
sempre crescente rischio informatico ha sul cosiddetto \u201cmodello di agenzia europea\u201d. A
tal fine sar\ue0 fornita, in primo luogo, una panoramica generale della normativa che
regola ENISA. In secondo luogo, verranno analizzate le precedenti modifiche normative
e le recenti proposte di riforma relative all\u2019Agenzia, anche alla luce della dottrina
tradizionale di settore. In seguito ci si interrogher\ue0 sulla capacit\ue0 dell\u2019Agenzia di
rispettare i pi\uf9 elevati standard di diritto amministrativo rispetto alla \u201cDichiarazione
congiunta e all\u2019approccio comune\u201d (Joint Statement and Common Approach)
concordato nel luglio 2012 dal Gruppo di lavoro interistituzionale sulle agenzie
decentralizzate dell\u2019Unione europea. In conclusione verr\ue0 sostenuto che, come
dimostrato dall\u2019odierna minaccia nel settore della sicurezza informatica, vi \ue8 la
necessit\ue0 che le riforme delle agenzie europee assumano carattere meno frammentario
e vadano oltre lo status quo attuale nella governance europea
The Physical Role of Gravitational and Gauge Degrees of Freedom in General Relativity - II: Dirac versus Bergmann observables and the Objectivity of Space-Time
(abridged)The achievements of the present work include: a) A clarification of
the multiple definition given by Bergmann of the concept of {\it (Bergmann)
observable. This clarification leads to the proposal of a {\it main conjecture}
asserting the existence of i) special Dirac's observables which are also
Bergmann's observables, ii) gauge variables that are coordinate independent
(namely they behave like the tetradic scalar fields of the Newman-Penrose
formalism). b) The analysis of the so-called {\it Hole} phenomenology in strict
connection with the Hamiltonian treatment of the initial value problem in
metric gravity for the class of Christoudoulou -Klainermann space-times, in
which the temporal evolution is ruled by the {\it weak} ADM energy. It is
crucial the re-interpretation of {\it active} diffeomorphisms as {\it passive
and metric-dependent} dynamical symmetries of Einstein's equations, a
re-interpretation which enables to disclose their (nearly unknown) connection
to gauge transformations on-shell; this is expounded in the first paper
(gr-qc/0403081). The use of the Bergmann-Komar {\it intrinsic
pseudo-coordinates} allows to construct a {\it physical atlas} of 4-coordinate
systems for the 4-dimensional {\it mathematical} manifold, in terms of the
highly non-local degrees of freedom of the gravitational field (its four
independent {\it Dirac observables}), and to realize the {\it physical
individuation} of the points of space-time as {\it point-events} as a
gauge-fixing problem, also associating a non-commutative structure to each
4-coordinate system.Comment: 41 pages, Revtex
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