49 research outputs found
Perfect mirrors and the self-accelerating box paradox
We consider the question raised by Unruh and Wald of whether mirrored boxes
can self-accelerate in flat spacetime (the ``self-accelerating box paradox'').
From the point of view of the box, which perceives the acceleration as an
impressed gravitational field, this is equivalent to asking whether the box can
be supported by the buoyant force arising from its immersion in a perceived
bath of thermal (Unruh) radiation. The perfect mirrors we study are of the type
that rely on light internal degrees of freedom which adjust to and reflect
impinging radiation. We suggest that a minimum of one internal mirror degree of
freedom is required for each bulk field degree of freedom reflected. A short
calculation then shows that such mirrors necessarily absorb enough heat from
the thermal bath that their increased mass prevents them from floating on the
thermal radiation. For this type of mirror the paradox is therefore resolved.
We also observe that this failure of boxes to ``float'' invalidates one of the
assumptions going into the Unruh-Wald analysis of entropy balances involving
boxes lowered adiabatically toward black holes. Nevertheless, their broad
argument can be maintained until the box reaches a new regime in which
box-antibox pairs dominate over massless fields as contributions to thermal
radiation.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex4, changes made in response to referee and to enhance
clarity, discussion of massive fields correcte
On the Status of Highly Entropic Objects
It has been proposed that the entropy of any object must satisfy fundamental
(holographic or Bekenstein) bounds set by the object's size and perhaps its
energy. However, most discussions of these bounds have ignored the possibility
that objects violating the putative bounds could themselves become important
components of Hawking radiation. We show that this possibility cannot a priori
be neglected in existing derivations of the bounds. Thus this effect could
potentially invalidate these derivations; but it might also lead to
observational evidence for the bounds themselves.Comment: 6 pages, RevTex, a few editorial change
Ten Proofs of the Generalized Second Law
Ten attempts to prove the Generalized Second Law of Thermodyanmics (GSL) are
described and critiqued. Each proof provides valuable insights which should be
useful for constructing future, more complete proofs. Rather than merely
summarizing previous research, this review offers new perspectives, and
strategies for overcoming limitations of the existing proofs. A long
introductory section addresses some choices that must be made in any
formulation the GSL: Should one use the Gibbs or the Boltzmann entropy? Should
one use the global or the apparent horizon? Is it necessary to assume any
entropy bounds? If the area has quantum fluctuations, should the GSL apply to
the average area? The definition and implications of the classical,
hydrodynamic, semiclassical and full quantum gravity regimes are also
discussed. A lack of agreement regarding how to define the "quasi-stationary"
regime is addressed by distinguishing it from the "quasi-steady" regime.Comment: 60 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. v2: corrected typos and added a
footnote to match the published versio
All the Four Dimensional Static, Spherically Symmetric Solutions of Abelian Kaluza-Klein Theory
We present the explicit form for all the four dimensional, static,
spherically symmetric solutions in -d Abelian Kaluza-Klein theory by
performing a subset of transformations corresponding to four
boosts on the Schwarzschild solution, supplemented by
transformations. The solutions are parameterized by the mass , Taub-Nut
charge , electric and magnetic
charges. Non-extreme black holes (with zero Taub-NUT charge) have either the
Reissner-Nordstr\" om or Schwarzschild global space-time. Supersymmetric
extreme black holes have a null or naked singularity, while non-supersymmetric
extreme ones have a global space-time of extreme Reissner-Nordstr\" om black
holes.Comment: 8 pages, uses RevTex, improved version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Some Properties of Noether Charge and a Proposal for Dynamical Black Hole Entropy
We consider a general, classical theory of gravity with arbitrary matter
fields in dimensions, arising from a diffeomorphism invariant Lagrangian,
\bL. We first show that \bL always can be written in a ``manifestly
covariant" form. We then show that the symplectic potential current
-form, , and the symplectic current -form, \om, for the
theory always can be globally defined in a covariant manner. Associated with
any infinitesimal diffeomorphism is a Noether current -form, \bJ, and
corresponding Noether charge -form, \bQ. We derive a general
``decomposition formula" for \bQ. Using this formula for the Noether charge,
we prove that the first law of black hole mechanics holds for arbitrary
perturbations of a stationary black hole. (For higher derivative theories,
previous arguments had established this law only for stationary perturbations.)
Finally, we propose a local, geometrical prescription for the entropy,
, of a dynamical black hole. This prescription agrees with the Noether
charge formula for stationary black holes and their perturbations, and is
independent of all ambiguities associated with the choices of \bL, , and
\bQ. However, the issue of whether this dynamical entropy in general obeys a
``second law" of black hole mechanics remains open. In an appendix, we apply
some of our results to theories with a nondynamical metric and also briefly
develop the theory of stress-energy pseudotensors.Comment: 30 pages, LaTe
A Proof of the Generalized Second Law for Two-Dimensional Black Holes
We investigate the generalized second law for two-dimensional black holes in
equilibrium (Hartle-Hawking) and nonequilibrium (Unruh) with the heat bath
surrounding the black holes. We obtain a simple expression for the change of
total entropy in terms of covariant thermodynamic variables, which is valid not
only for the Hartle-Hawking state but also for the Unruh state up to leading
order, without assuming a quasi-stationary evolution of the black holes. Using
this expression, it is shown that the rate of local entropy production is
non-negative in the two-dimensional black hole systems.Comment: 15 pages, boundary condition of static black hole is added to clarify
the situation, abstract and section 4 (concluding remarks) is rewritten, and
minor corrections, references adde
Treadmill exercise activates subcortical neural networks and improves walking after a stroke
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Stroke often impairs gait thereby reducing mobility and fitness and promoting chronic disability. Gait is a complex sensorimotor function controlled by integrated cortical, subcortical, and spinal networks. The mechanisms of gait recovery after stroke are not well understood. This study examines the hypothesis that progressive task-repetitive treadmill exercise (T-EX) improves fitness and gait function in subjects with chronic hemiparetic stroke by inducing adaptations in the brain (plasticity).METHODS: A randomized controlled trial determined the effects of 6-month T-EX (n=37) versus comparable duration stretching (CON, n=34) on walking, aerobic fitness and in a subset (n=15/17) on brain activation measured by functional MRI.RESULTS: T-EX significantly improved treadmill-walking velocity by 51% and cardiovascular fitness by 18% (11% and -3% for CON, respectively; P<0.05). T-EX but not CON affected brain activation during paretic, but not during nonparetic limb movement, showing 72% increased activation in posterior cerebellar lobe and 18% in midbrain (P<0.005). Exercise-mediated improvements in walking velocity correlated with increased activation in cerebellum and midbrain.CONCLUSIONS: T-EX improves walking, fitness and recruits cerebellum-midbrain circuits, likely reflecting neural network plasticity. This neural recruitment is associated with better walking. These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of T-EX rehabilitation in promoting gait recovery of stroke survivors with long-term mobility impairment and provide evidence of neuroplastic mechanisms that could lead to further refinements in these paradigms to improve functional outcomes
Flat Information Geometries in Black Hole Thermodynamics
The Hessian of either the entropy or the energy function can be regarded as a
metric on a Gibbs surface. For two parameter families of asymptotically flat
black holes in arbitrary dimension one or the other of these metrics are flat,
and the state space is a flat wedge. The mathematical reason for this is traced
back to the scale invariance of the Einstein-Maxwell equations. The picture of
state space that we obtain makes some properties such as the occurence of
divergent specific heats transparent.Comment: 14 pages, one figure. Dedicated to Rafael Sorkin's birthda
Wormholes and Flux Tubes in 5D Kaluza-Klein Theory
In this paper spherically symmetric solutions to 5D Kaluza-Klein theory, with
``electric'' and/or ``magnetic'' fields are investigated. It is shown that the
global structure of the spacetime depends on the relation between the
``electrical'' and ``magnetic'' Kaluza-Klein fields. For small ``magnetic''
field we find a wormhole-like solution. As the strength of the ``magnetic''
field is increased relative to the strength of the ``electrical'' field, the
wormhole-like solution evolves into a finite or infinite flux tube depending on
the strengths of the two fields. For the large ``electric'' field case we
conjecture that this solution can be considered as the mouth of a wormhole,
with the , and components of the metric acting as
the source of the exotic matter necessary for the formation of the wormhole's
mouth. For the large ``magnetic'' field case a 5D flux tube forms, which is
similar to the flux tube between two monopoles in Type-II superconductors, or
the hypothesized color field flux tube between two quarks in the QCD vacuum.Comment: 12 pages, 5 eps.figures, REVTEX, Discussion about null surfaces
ammended. References added. To be published in PR
STATIC FOUR-DIMENSIONAL ABELIAN BLACK HOLES IN KALUZA-KLEIN THEORY
Static, four-dimensional (4-d) black holes (BH's) in ()-d Kaluza-Klein
(KK) theory with Abelian isometry and diagonal internal metric have at most one
electric () and one magnetic () charges, which can either come from the
same -gauge field (corresponding to BH's in effective 5-d KK theory) or
from different ones (corresponding to BH's with isometry
of an effective 6-d KK theory). In the latter case, explicit non-extreme
solutions have the global space-time of Schwarzschild BH's, finite temperature,
and non-zero entropy. In the extreme (supersymmetric) limit the singularity
becomes null, the temperature saturates the upper bound
, and entropy is zero. A class of KK BH's with
constrained charge configurations, exhibiting a continuous electric-magnetic
duality, are generated by global transformations on the above classes
of the solutions.Comment: 11 pages, 2 Postscript figures. uses RevTeX and psfig.sty (for figs)
paper and figs also at ftp://dept.physics.upenn.edu/pub/Cvetic/UPR-645-