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Galaxies, Volume 3, Issue 2 (June 2015) – 3 articles , Pages 72-112

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252 KiB  
Article
Quantum Corrected Non-Thermal Radiation Spectrum from the Tunnelling Mechanism
by Subenoy Chakraborty, Subhajit Saha and Christian Corda
Galaxies 2015, 3(2), 103-112; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies3020103 - 12 Jun 2015
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3711
Abstract
The tunnelling mechanism is today considered a popular and widely used method in describing Hawking radiation. However, in relation to black hole (BH) emission, this mechanism is mostly used to obtain the Hawking temperature by comparing the probability of emission of an outgoing [...] Read more.
The tunnelling mechanism is today considered a popular and widely used method in describing Hawking radiation. However, in relation to black hole (BH) emission, this mechanism is mostly used to obtain the Hawking temperature by comparing the probability of emission of an outgoing particle with the Boltzmann factor. On the other hand, Banerjee and Majhi reformulated the tunnelling framework deriving a black body spectrum through the density matrix for the outgoing modes for both the Bose-Einstein distribution and the Fermi-Dirac distribution. In contrast, Parikh and Wilczek introduced a correction term performing an exact calculation of the action for a tunnelling spherically symmetric particle and, as a result, the probability of emission of an outgoing particle corresponds to a non-strictly thermal radiation spectrum. Recently, one of us (C. Corda) introduced a BH effective state and was able to obtain a non-strictly black body spectrum from the tunnelling mechanism corresponding to the probability of emission of an outgoing particle found by Parikh and Wilczek. The present work introduces the quantum corrected effective temperature and the corresponding quantum corrected effective metric is written using Hawking’s periodicity arguments. Thus, we obtain further corrections to the non-strictly thermal BH radiation spectrum as the final distributions take into account both the BH dynamical geometry during the emission of the particle and the quantum corrections to the semiclassical Hawking temperature. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Gravitational Research)
460 KiB  
Article
Sagnac Effect, Ring Lasers and Terrestrial Tests of Gravity
by Matteo Luca Ruggiero
Galaxies 2015, 3(2), 84-102; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies3020084 - 21 May 2015
Cited by 14 | Viewed by 5631
Abstract
Light can be used as a probe to explore the structure of space-time: this is usual in astrophysical and cosmological tests; however, it has been recently suggested that this can be done also in terrestrial laboratories. Namely, the Gyroscopes In General Relativity (GINGER) [...] Read more.
Light can be used as a probe to explore the structure of space-time: this is usual in astrophysical and cosmological tests; however, it has been recently suggested that this can be done also in terrestrial laboratories. Namely, the Gyroscopes In General Relativity (GINGER) project aims at measuring post-Newtonian effects, such as the gravito-magnetic ones, in an Earth-based laboratory, by means of a ring laser array. Here, we first review the theoretical foundations of the Sagnac effect, on which ring lasers are based, and then, we study the Sagnac effect in a terrestrial laboratory, emphasizing the origin of the gravitational contributions that GINGER aims at measuring. Moreover, we show that accurate measurements allow one to set constraints on theories of gravity different from general relativity. Eventually, we describe the experimental setup of GINGER. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Gravitational Research)
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324 KiB  
Article
Perspectives on Gravity-Induced Radiative Processes in Astrophysics
by Giorgio Papini
Galaxies 2015, 3(2), 72-83; https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies3020072 - 16 Apr 2015
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3627
Abstract
Single-vertex Feynman diagrams represent the dominant contribution to physical processes, but are frequently forbidden kinematically. This is changed when the particles involved propagate in a gravitational background and acquire an effective mass. Procedures are introduced that allow the calculation of lowest order diagrams, [...] Read more.
Single-vertex Feynman diagrams represent the dominant contribution to physical processes, but are frequently forbidden kinematically. This is changed when the particles involved propagate in a gravitational background and acquire an effective mass. Procedures are introduced that allow the calculation of lowest order diagrams, their corresponding transition probabilities, emission powers and spectra to all orders in the metric deviation, for particles of any spin propagating in gravitational fields described by any metric. Physical properties of the “space-time medium” are also discussed. It is shown in particular that a small dissipation term in the particle wave equations can trigger a strong back-reaction that introduces resonances in the radiative process and affects the resulting gravitational background. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Gravitational Research)
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