George E. A. Matsas
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by George E. A. Matsas.
Reviews of Modern Physics | 2008
Luís C. B. Crispino; Atsushi Higuchi; George E. A. Matsas
It has been 30 years since the discovery of the Unruh effect. It has played a crucial role in our understanding that the particle content of a field theory is observer dependent. This effect is important in its own right and as a way to understand the phenomenon of particle emission from black holes and cosmological horizons. The Unruh effect is reviewed here with particular emphasis on its applications. A number of recent developments are also commented on and some controversies are discussed. Effort is also made to clarify what seem to be common misconceptions.
Physics Letters A | 1996
Peter T. Landsberg; George E. A. Matsas
Using the Unruh-DeWitt detector, it is shown that a universal and continuous Lorentz transformation of temperature cannot exist for black-body radiation. Since any valid Lorentz transformation of temperature must be able to deal with black-body radiation, it is concluded that a universal and continuous temperature transformation does not exist.
Physical Review A | 2010
L. C. Celeri; Andre G. S. Landulfo; R. M. Serra; George E. A. Matsas
We use the Unruh effect to analyze the dynamics of classical and quantum correlations for a two-qubit system when one of them is uniformly accelerated for a finite amount of proper time. We show that the quantum correlation is completely destroyed in the limit of infinite acceleration, while the classical one remains nonzero. In particular, we show that such correlations exhibit the so-called sudden-change behavior as a function of acceleration. Eventually, we discuss how our results can be interpreted when the system lies in the vicinity of the event horizon of a Schwarzschild black hole.
Physical Review Letters | 2001
Daniel A. T. Vanzella; George E. A. Matsas
We investigate the weak decay of uniformly accelerated protons in the context of standard quantum field theory. Because the mean proper lifetime of a particle is a scalar, the same value for this observable must be obtained in the inertial and coaccelerated frames. We are only able to achieve this equality by considering the Fulling-Davies-Unruh effect. This reflects the fact that the Fulling-Davies-Unruh effect is mandatory for the consistency of quantum field theory.
General Relativity and Gravitation | 1988
Gerson Francisco; George E. A. Matsas
The continuous evolution of the Mixmaster universe toward the cosmological singularity contains features that differ substantially from its discrete counterpart. We examine here the determination and interpretation of the Liapunov exponent of the continuous orbit. It is briefly mentioned that this is not the only aspect of the Mixmaster dynamics to be affected when we switch from continuous to discrete mode of evolution.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
George E. A. Matsas; André Ricardo Rocha da Silva
We examine a nearly extreme macroscopic Reissner-Nördstrom black hole in the context of semiclassical gravity. The absorption rate associated with the quantum tunneling process of scalar particles whereby this black hole can acquire enough angular momentum to violate the weak cosmic-censorship conjecture is shown to be nonzero.
Physics Letters A | 1995
Sandro S. Costa; George E. A. Matsas
We investigate whether inertial thermometers moving in a thermal bath behave as being hotter or colder. This question is directly related with the classical controversy concerning how temperature transforms under Lorentz transformations. Rather than basing our arguments on thermodynamical hypotheses, we use plain relativistic quantum field theoretical methods.
Physical Review D | 1999
George E. A. Matsas; Daniel A. T. Vanzella
Inst. de Fis. Teorica Universidade Estadual Paulista, Rua Pamplona 145, 01405-900, Sao Paulo, SP
Physical Review Letters | 2010
William C. C. Lima; George E. A. Matsas; Daniel A. T. Vanzella
Void of any inherent structure in classical physics, the vacuum has revealed to be incredibly crowded with all sorts of processes in relativistic quantum physics. Yet, its direct effects are usually so subtle that its structure remains almost as evasive as in classical physics. Here, in contrast, we report on the discovery of a novel effect according to which the vacuum is compelled to play an unexpected central role in an astrophysical context. We show that the formation of relativistic stars may lead the vacuum energy density of a quantum field to an exponential growth. The vacuum-driven evolution which would then follow may lead to unexpected implications for astrophysics, while the observation of stable neutron-star configurations may teach us much on the field content of our Universe.
Physical Review D | 1998
Atsushi Higuchi; George E. A. Matsas; Daniel Sudarsky
We show that the response rate of (i) a static source interacting with Hawking radiation of a massless scalar field in Schwarzschild spacetime (with the Unruh vacuum) and that of (ii) a uniformly accelerated source with the same proper acceleration in Minkowski spacetime (with the Minkowski vacuum) are equal. We show that this equality will not hold if the Unruh vacuum is replaced by the Hartle-Hawking vacuum. It is verified that the source responds to the Hawking radiation near the horizon as if it were at rest in a thermal bath in Minkowski spacetime with the same temperature. It is also verified that the response rate in the Hartle-Hawking vacuum approaches that in Minkowski spacetime with the same temperature far away from the black hole. Finally, we compare our results with others in the literature.