781 research outputs found
Why does gravitational radiation produce vorticity?
We calculate the vorticity of world--lines of observers at rest in a
Bondi--Sachs frame, produced by gravitational radiation, in a general Sachs
metric. We claim that such an effect is related to the super--Poynting vector,
in a similar way as the existence of the electromagnetic Poynting vector is
related to the vorticity in stationary electrovacum spacetimes.Comment: 9 pages; to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
On the stability of the shear-free condition
The evolution equation for the shear is reobtained for a spherically
symmetric anisotropic, viscous dissipative fluid distribution, which allows us
to investigate conditions for the stability of the shear-free condition. The
specific case of geodesic fluids is considered in detail, showing that the
shear-free condition, in this particular case, may be unstable, the departure
from the shear-free condition being controlled by the expansion scalar and a
single scalar function defined in terms of the anisotropy of the pressure, the
shear viscosity and the Weyl tensor or, alternatively, in terms of the
anisotropy of the pressure, the dissipative variables and the energy density
inhomogeneity.Comment: 19 pages Latex. To appear in Gen. Rel. Gra
Irreversible Processes in Inflationary Cosmological Models
By using the thermodynamic theory of irreversible processes and Einstein
general relativity, a cosmological model is proposed where the early universe
is considered as a mixture of a scalar field with a matter field. The scalar
field refers to the inflaton while the matter field to the classical particles.
The irreversibility is related to a particle production process at the expense
of the gravitational energy and of the inflaton energy. The particle production
process is represented by a non-equilibrium pressure in the energy-momentum
tensor. The non-equilibrium pressure is proportional to the Hubble parameter
and its proportionality factor is identified with the coefficient of bulk
viscosity. The dynamic equations of the inflaton and the Einstein field
equations determine the time evolution of the cosmic scale factor, the Hubble
parameter, the acceleration and of the energy densities of the inflaton and
matter. Among other results it is shown that in some regimes the acceleration
is positive which simulates an inflation. Moreover, the acceleration decreases
and tends to zero in the instant of time where the energy density of matter
attains its maximum value.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, to appear in PR
Experimental tests on shallow foundations of onshore wind turbine towers
The current effort towards the progressive switch from carbon-based to renewable energy production is leading to a relevant spreading of both on- and off-shore wind turbine towers. Regarding reinforced concrete shallow foundations of onshore wind turbine steel towers, possible reductions of reinforcement may increase their sustainability, speed of erection, and competitiveness. The article presents the results of an experimental program carried out at Politecnico di Milano concerning both cyclic and monotonic loading, simulating extreme wind conditions on 1:15 scaled models of wind turbine steel towers connected by stud bolt adapters to reinforced concrete shallow foundations embedded in a sandy soil. Three couples of foundation specimens were tested with different reinforcement layouts: (a) similar to current praxis, (b) without shear reinforcement, and (c) without shear reinforcement and with 50% of ordinary steel rebars replaced by steel fibers. Additional vertical loads were added to the small-scale models in order to ensure similarity in terms of stresses. The test results allowed to (i) characterize the mechanical behavior of the foundation element considering soil-structure interaction under both service and ultimate load conditions, (ii) assess the foundation failure mode, (iii) highlight the role of each typology of reinforcing bars forming the cage, and (iv) provide hints for the optimization of these latter
Impact of saturated granular masses against rigid obstacles: the role of fluid compressibility and front inclination
Dissipative fluids out of hydrostatic equilibrium
In the context of the M\"{u}ller-Israel-Stewart second order phenomenological
theory for dissipative fluids, we analyze the effects of thermal conduction and
viscosity in a relativistic fluid, just after its departure from hydrostatic
equilibrium, on a time scale of the order of relaxation times. Stability and
causality conditions are contrasted with conditions for which the ''effective
inertial mass'' vanishes.Comment: 21 pages, 1 postscript figure (LaTex 2.09 and epsfig.sty required)
Submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravit
Cavity evolution in relativistic self-gravitating fluids
We consider the evolution of cavities within spherically symmetric
relativistic fluids, under the assumption that proper radial distance between
neighboring fluid elements remains constant during their evolution (purely
areal evolution condition). The general formalism is deployed and solutions are
presented. Some of them satisfy Darmois conditions whereas others present
shells and must satisfy Israel conditions, on either one or both boundary
surfaces. Prospective applications of these results to some astrophysical
scenarios is suggested.Comment: 10 pages Revtex. To appear in Class. Quantum Grav
Thermodynamics and Kinetic Theory of Relativistic Gases in 2-D Cosmological Models
A kinetic theory of relativistic gases in a two-dimensional space is
developed in order to obtain the equilibrium distribution function and the
expressions for the fields of energy per particle, pressure, entropy per
particle and heat capacities in equilibrium. Furthermore, by using the method
of Chapman and Enskog for a kinetic model of the Boltzmann equation the
non-equilibrium energy-momentum tensor and the entropy production rate are
determined for a universe described by a two-dimensional Robertson-Walker
metric. The solutions of the gravitational field equations that consider the
non-equilibrium energy-momentum tensor - associated with the coefficient of
bulk viscosity - show that opposed to the four-dimensional case, the cosmic
scale factor attains a maximum value at a finite time decreasing to a "big
crunch" and that there exists a solution of the gravitational field equations
corresponding to a "false vacuum". The evolution of the fields of pressure,
energy density and entropy production rate with the time is also discussed.Comment: 23 pages, accepted in PR
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