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Analogue Gravity Phenomenology: Analogue Spacetimes and Horizons, from Theory to Experiment: Lecture Notes in Physics, cartea 870

Editat de Daniele Faccio, Francesco Belgiorno, Sergio Cacciatori, Vittorio Gorini, Stefano Liberati, Ugo Moschella
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 aug 2013
Analogue Gravity Phenomenology is a collection of contributions that cover a vast range of areas in physics, ranging from surface wave propagation in fluids to nonlinear optics. The underlying common aspect of all these topics, and hence the main focus and perspective from which they are explained here, is the attempt to develop analogue models for gravitational systems. The original and main motivation of the field is the verification and study of Hawking radiation from a horizon: the enabling feature is the possibility to generate horizons in the laboratory with a wide range of physical systems that involve a flow of one kind or another. The years around 2010 and onwards witnessed a sudden surge of experimental activity in this expanding field of research. However, building an expertise in analogue gravity requires the researcher to be equipped with a rather broad range of knowledge and interests. The aim of this book is to bring the reader up to date with the latest developments and provide the basic background required in order to appreciate the goals, difficulties, and success stories in the field of analogue gravity.
Each chapter of the book treats a different topic explained in detail by the major experts for each specific discipline. The first chapters give an overview of black hole spacetimes and Hawking radiation before moving on to describe the large variety of analogue spacetimes that have been proposed and are currently under investigation. This introductory part is then followed by an in-depth description of what are currently the three most promising analogue spacetime settings, namely surface waves in flowing fluids, acoustic oscillations in Bose-Einstein condensates and electromagnetic waves in nonlinear optics. Both theory and experimental endeavours are explained in detail. The final chapters refer to other aspects of analogue gravity beyond the study of Hawking radiation, such as Lorentz invariance violations and Brownian motion in curved spacetimes, before concluding with a return to the origins of the field and a description of the available observational evidence for horizons in astrophysical black holes.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783319002651
ISBN-10: 3319002651
Pagini: 460
Ilustrații: XX, 439 p. 124 illus., 95 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Ediția:2013
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Seria Lecture Notes in Physics

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Public țintă

Research

Cuprins

Black Holes and Hawking Radiation in Spacetime and its Analogues.- Survey of Analogue Spacetimes.- Cosmological Particle Creation in the Lab.- Irrotational, Two-Dimensional Surface Waves in Fluids.- The Basics of Water Waves Theory for Analogue Gravity.- The Čerenkov Effect Revisited: From Swimming Ducks to Zero Modes in Gravitational Analogues.- Some Aspects of Dispersive Horizons: Lessons from Surface Waves.- Classical Aspects of Hawking Radiation Verified in Analogue Gravity Experiment.- Understanding Hawking Radiation from Models of Atomic Bose-Einstein Condensates.- Transformation Optics.- Laser Pulse Analogues for Gravity.- An All-Optical Event Horizon in an Optical Analogue of a Laval Nozzle.- Lorentz Breaking Effective Field Theory and Observational Tests.- The Topology of Quantum Vacuum.- Einstein² :Brownian Motion Meets General Relativity.- Astrophysical Black Holes: Evidence of a Horizon?.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Analogue Gravity Phenomenology is a collection of contributions that cover a vast range of areas in physics, ranging from surface wave propagation in fluids to nonlinear optics. The underlying common aspect of all these topics, and hence the main focus and perspective from which they are explained here, is the attempt to develop analogue models for gravitational systems. The original and main motivation of the field is the verification and study of Hawking radiation from a horizon: the enabling feature is the possibility to generate horizons in the laboratory with a wide range of physical systems that involve a flow of one kind or another. The years around 2010 and onwards witnessed a sudden surge of experimental activity in this expanding field of research. However, building an expertise in analogue gravity requires the researcher to be equipped with a rather broad range of knowledge and interests. The aim of this book is to bring the reader up to date with the latest developments and provide the basic background required in order to appreciate the goals, difficulties and success stories in the field of analogue gravity.
Each chapter of the book treats a different topic explained in detail by the major experts for each specific discipline. The first chapters give an overview of black hole spacetimes and Hawking radiation before moving on to describe the large variety of analogue spacetimes that have been proposed and are currently under investigation. This introductory part is then followed by an in-depth description of what are currently the three most promising analogue spacetime settings, namely surface waves in flowing fluids, acoustic oscillations in Bose-Einstein condensates and electromagnetic waves in nonlinear optics. Both theory and experimental endeavours are explained in detail. The final chapters refer to other aspects of analogue gravity beyond the study of Hawking radiation, such as Lorentz invariance violations and Brownian motion in curved spacetimes, before concluding with a return to the origins of the field and a description of the available observational evidence for horizons in astrophysical black holes.

Caracteristici

Describes the first experimental results in the study of analogues to gravity in the laboratory Covers all the major approaches for constructive analogies that have been contrived to date Explains, relates, and integrates the different ways in which the metrical nature of the universe is reflected in laboratory materials and systems Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras