0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

Pseudo-Complex General Relativity (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016): Peter O. Hess, Mirko Schafer, Walter Greiner Pseudo-Complex General Relativity (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
Peter O. Hess, Mirko Schafer, Walter Greiner
R3,633 R3,234 Discovery Miles 32 340 Save R399 (11%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days

This book explores the role of singularities in general relativity (GR): The theory predicts that when a sufficient large mass collapses, no known force is able to stop it until all mass is concentrated at a point. The question arises, whether an acceptable physical theory should have a singularity, not even a coordinate singularity. The appearance of a singularity shows the limitations of the theory. In GR this limitation is the strong gravitational force acting near and at a super-massive concentration of a central mass. First, a historical overview is given, on former attempts to extend GR (which includes Einstein himself), all with distinct motivations. It will be shown that the only possible algebraic extension is to introduce pseudo-complex (pc) coordinates, otherwise for weak gravitational fields non-physical ghost solutions appear. Thus, the need to use pc-variables. We will see, that the theory contains a minimal length, with important consequences. After that, the pc-GR is formulated and compared to the former attempts. A new variational principle is introduced, which requires in the Einstein equations an additional contribution. Alternatively, the standard variational principle can be applied, but one has to introduce a constraint with the same former results. The additional contribution will be associated to vacuum fluctuation, whose dependence on the radial distance can be approximately obtained, using semi-classical Quantum Mechanics. The main point is that pc-GR predicts that mass not only curves the space but also changes the vacuum structure of the space itself. In the following chapters, the minimal length will be set to zero, due to its smallness. Nevertheless, the pc-GR will keep a remnant of the pc-description, namely that the appearance of a term, which we may call "dark energy", is inevitable. The first application will be discussed in chapter 3, namely solutions of central mass distributions. For a non-rotating massive object it is the pc-Schwarzschild solution, for a rotating massive object the pc-Kerr solution and for a charged massive object it will be the Reissner-Nordstroem solution. This chapter serves to become familiar on how to resolve problems in pc-GR and on how to interpret the results. One of the main consequences is, that we can eliminate the event horizon and thus there will be no black holes. The huge massive objects in the center of nearly any galaxy and the so-called galactic black holes are within pc-GR still there, but with the absence of an event horizon! Chapter 4 gives another application of the theory, namely the Robertson-Walker solution, which we use to model different outcomes of the evolution of the universe. Finally the capability of this theory to predict new phenomena is illustrated.

Pseudo-Complex General Relativity (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2016): Peter O. Hess, Mirko Schafer,... Pseudo-Complex General Relativity (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2016)
Peter O. Hess, Mirko Schafer, Walter Greiner
R3,345 Discovery Miles 33 450 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book explores the role of singularities in general relativity (GR): The theory predicts that when a sufficient large mass collapses, no known force is able to stop it until all mass is concentrated at a point. The question arises, whether an acceptable physical theory should have a singularity, not even a coordinate singularity. The appearance of a singularity shows the limitations of the theory. In GR this limitation is the strong gravitational force acting near and at a super-massive concentration of a central mass. First, a historical overview is given, on former attempts to extend GR (which includes Einstein himself), all with distinct motivations. It will be shown that the only possible algebraic extension is to introduce pseudo-complex (pc) coordinates, otherwise for weak gravitational fields non-physical ghost solutions appear. Thus, the need to use pc-variables. We will see, that the theory contains a minimal length, with important consequences. After that, the pc-GR is formulated and compared to the former attempts. A new variational principle is introduced, which requires in the Einstein equations an additional contribution. Alternatively, the standard variational principle can be applied, but one has to introduce a constraint with the same former results. The additional contribution will be associated to vacuum fluctuation, whose dependence on the radial distance can be approximately obtained, using semi-classical Quantum Mechanics. The main point is that pc-GR predicts that mass not only curves the space but also changes the vacuum structure of the space itself. In the following chapters, the minimal length will be set to zero, due to its smallness. Nevertheless, the pc-GR will keep a remnant of the pc-description, namely that the appearance of a term, which we may call "dark energy", is inevitable. The first application will be discussed in chapter 3, namely solutions of central mass distributions. For a non-rotating massive object it is the pc-Schwarzschild solution, for a rotating massive object the pc-Kerr solution and for a charged massive object it will be the Reissner-Nordstroem solution. This chapter serves to become familiar on how to resolve problems in pc-GR and on how to interpret the results. One of the main consequences is, that we can eliminate the event horizon and thus there will be no black holes. The huge massive objects in the center of nearly any galaxy and the so-called galactic black holes are within pc-GR still there, but with the absence of an event horizon! Chapter 4 gives another application of the theory, namely the Robertson-Walker solution, which we use to model different outcomes of the evolution of the universe. Finally the capability of this theory to predict new phenomena is illustrated.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Things That Go-A Traveling Alphabet…
Seymour Reit Hardcover R497 Discovery Miles 4 970
Colours of Art - The Story of Art in 80…
Chloe Ashby Hardcover R646 Discovery Miles 6 460
F Is for French Quarter
Scott Campbell, Tallulah Campbell, … Hardcover R513 R484 Discovery Miles 4 840
Advances in Bacterial Paracrystalline…
Terry J. Beveridge, Susan F. Koval Hardcover R5,781 Discovery Miles 57 810
Hello, Nashville!
Martha Day Zschock Board book R254 R239 Discovery Miles 2 390
The Middle East in the Twentieth Century
Martin Sicker Hardcover R2,796 Discovery Miles 27 960
Land, Memory, Reconstruction and Justice…
Anna Bohlin, Ruth Hall, … Paperback R120 R111 Discovery Miles 1 110
Joburg Noir
Niq Mhlongo Paperback  (2)
R280 R259 Discovery Miles 2 590
Race, Nation, Translation - South…
Zoe Wicomb Paperback R395 R365 Discovery Miles 3 650
2019
Gunter Berghaus, Oleh S. Ilnytzkyj, … Hardcover R5,009 Discovery Miles 50 090

 

Partners