1,519 research outputs found
Nonholonomic Mapping Principle for Classical Mechanics in Spaces with Curvature and Torsion. New Covariant Conservation Law for Energy-Momentum Tensor
The lecture explains the geometric basis for the recently-discovered
nonholonomic mapping principle which specifies certain laws of nature in
spacetimes with curvature and torsion from those in flat spacetime, thus
replacing and extending Einstein's equivalence principle. An important
consequence is a new action principle for determining the equation of motion of
a free spinless point particle in such spacetimes. Surprisingly, this equation
contains a torsion force, although the action involves only the metric. This
force changes geodesic into autoparallel trajectories, which are a direct
manifestation of inertia. The geometric origin of the torsion force is a
closure failure of parallelograms. The torsion force changes the covariant
conservation law of the energy-momentum tensor whose new form is derived.Comment: Corrected typos. Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Paper also at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleiner_re261/preprint.htm
Two-Loop Effective Potential of O(N)-Symmetric Scalar QED in 4-epsilon Dimensions
The effective potential of scalar QED is computed analytically up to two
loops in the Landau gauge. The result is given in 4-epsilon dimensions using
minimal subtraction and epsilon-expansions. In three dimensions, our
calculation is intended to help throw light on unsolved problems of the
superconducting phase transition, where critical exponents and the position of
the tricritical point have not yet found a satisfactory explanation within the
renormalization group approach.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Latest update of
paper (including all PS fonts) at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/32
Variational Perturbation Theory for Fokker-Planck Equation with Nonlinear Drift
We develop a recursive method for perturbative solutions of the Fokker-Planck
equation with nonlinear drift. The series expansion of the time-dependent
probability density in terms of powers of the coupling constant is obtained by
solving a set of first-order linear ordinary differential equations. Resumming
the series in the spirit of variational perturbation theory we are able to
determine the probability density for all values of the coupling constant.
Comparison with numerical results shows exponential convergence with increasing
order.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.theo-phys.uni-essen.de/tp/ags/pelster_dir
Brownian motion of Massive Particle in a Space with Curvature and Torsion and Crystals with Defects
We develop a theory of Brownian motion of a massive particle, including the
effects of inertia (Kramers' problem), in spaces with curvature and torsion.
This is done by invoking the recently discovered generalized equivalence
principle, according to which the equations of motion of a point particle in
such spaces can be obtained from the Newton equation in euclidean space by
means of a nonholonomic mapping. By this principle, the known Langevin equation
in euclidean space goes over into the correct Langevin equation in the Cartan
space. This, in turn, serves to derive the Kubo and Fokker-Planck equations
satisfied by the particle distribution as a function of time in such a space.
The theory can be applied to classical diffusion processes in crystals with
defects.Comment: LaTeX, http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/kleinert.htm
Non-universal Critical Quantities from Variational Perturbation Theory and Their Application to the BEC Temperature Shift
For an O(N) symmetric scalar field theory with Euclidean action integral d^3x
[1/2 |nabla phi|^2 + 1/2 r phi^2 + 1/4! u phi^4], where phi = (phi_1,...,phi_N)
is a vector of N real field components, variational perturbation theory through
seven loops is employed for N = 0,1,2,3,4 to compute the renormalized value of
r/(N+2)u^2 at the phase transition. Its exact large-N limit is determined as
well. We also extend an earlier computation of the interaction-induced shift
Delta/Nu for N = 1,2,4 to N = 0,3. For N = 2, the results for the two
quantities are used to compute the second-order shift of the condensation
temperature of a dilute Bose gas, both in the homogenous case and for the wide
limit of a harmonic trap. Our results are in agreement with earlier Monte Carlo
simulations for N = 1,2,4. The appendix contains previously unpublished
numerical seven-loop data provided to us by B.Nickel.Comment: 19 page
End-To-End Distribution Function Function of Stiff Polymers for all Persistence Lengths
We set up recursion relations for calculating all even moments of the
end-to-end distance of a Porod-Kratky wormlike chains in dimensions. From
these moments we derive a simple analytic expression for the end-to-end
distribution in three dimensions valid for all peristence lengths. It is in
excellent agreement with Monte Carlo data for stiff chains and goes properly
over into the Gaussian random-walk distributions for low stiffness.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Latest update of
paper (including all PS fonts) at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/345 Mathematica programs at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/b5/pgm1
Autoparallels From a New Action Principle
We present a simpler and more powerful version of the recently-discovered
action principle for the motion of a spinless point particle in spacetimes with
curvature and torsion. The surprising feature of the new principle is that an
action involving only the metric can produce an equation of motion with a
torsion force, thus changing geodesics to autoparallels. This additional
torsion force arises from a noncommutativity of variations with parameter
derivatives of the paths due to the closure failure of parallelograms in the
presence of torsionComment: Paper in src. Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html Read paper directly
with Netscape under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleiner_re243/preprint.htm
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