scholarly journals Unitary evolution to a state with a fixed mean number of particles

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (33) ◽  
pp. 2050213
Author(s):  
Bogusław Broda

In the framework of finite-dimensional Fock space models, for a predefined fixed mean number of particles [Formula: see text], it is shown that there is a “large” multidimensional subspace [Formula: see text] of initial pure states, in the space [Formula: see text] of all pure states, unitarily evolving to a subspace [Formula: see text] of final pure states which yield [Formula: see text]. As an example, in particular it follows that the blackbody form of the mean number of particles [Formula: see text] does not by itself contradict unitarity of black hole evaporation.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 8868
Author(s):  
Stefano Liberati ◽  
Giovanni Tricella ◽  
Andrea Trombettoni

We study the back-reaction associated with Hawking evaporation of an acoustic canonical analogue black hole in a Bose–Einstein condensate. We show that the emission of Hawking radiation induces a local back-reaction on the condensate, perturbing it in the near-horizon region, and a global back-reaction in the density distribution of the atoms. We discuss how these results produce useful insights into the process of black hole evaporation and its compatibility with a unitary evolution.


1994 ◽  
Vol 09 (29) ◽  
pp. 2661-2669 ◽  
Author(s):  
CLAUS KIEFER ◽  
RAINER MÜLLER ◽  
TEJINDER P. SINGH

We discuss the relevance of quantum gravitational corrections to the functional Schrödinger equation for black hole evaporation. These corrections are found from the Wheeler–DeWitt equation through a semiclassical expansion scheme. The dominant contribution in the final evaporation stage, when the black hole approaches the Planck regime, is a term which explicitly violates unitarity in the non-gravitational sector. While pure states remain pure, there is an increase in the degree of purity for non-pure states in this sector. This result holds irrespective of whether full quantum gravity respects unitarity or not.


Entropy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 940 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Liberati ◽  
Giovanni Tricella ◽  
Andrea Trombettoni

Analogue gravity can be used to reproduce the phenomenology of quantum field theory in curved spacetime and in particular phenomena such as cosmological particle creation and Hawking radiation. In black hole physics, taking into account the backreaction of such effects on the metric requires an extension to semiclassical gravity and leads to an apparent inconsistency in the theory: the black hole evaporation induces a breakdown of the unitary quantum evolution leading to the so-called information loss problem. Here, we show that analogue gravity can provide an interesting perspective on the resolution of this problem, albeit the backreaction in analogue systems is not described by semiclassical Einstein equations. In particular, by looking at the simpler problem of cosmological particle creation, we show, in the context of Bose–Einstein condensates analogue gravity, that the emerging analogue geometry and quasi-particles have correlations due to the quantum nature of the atomic degrees of freedom underlying the emergent spacetime. The quantum evolution is, of course, always unitary, but on the whole Hilbert space, which cannot be exactly factorized a posteriori in geometry and quasi-particle components. In analogy, in a black hole evaporation one should expect a continuous process creating correlations between the Hawking quanta and the microscopic quantum degrees of freedom of spacetime, implying that only a full quantum gravity treatment would be able to resolve the information loss problem by proving the unitary evolution on the full Hilbert space.


2009 ◽  
Vol 07 (05) ◽  
pp. 847-878 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEFFEN GIELEN

Stephen Hawking's discovery of black hole evaporation has the remarkable consequence that information is destroyed by a black hole, which can only be accommodated by modifying the laws of quantum mechanics. Different attempts to evade the information loss paradox were subsequently suggested, apparently without a satisfactory resolution of the paradox. On the other hand, attempting to include nonunitarity in quantum mechanics might lead to laws predicting observable consequences such as nonlocality or violation of energy–momentum conservation; but it may be possible to circumvent these obstacles. Recent developments seem to require a different view on quantum gravity and suggest that ideas about locality in physics and Hawking's semiclassical approximation are misleading. An accurate description may show unitary evolution and no information loss after all.


1980 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 777-782 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milan Šolc

The establishment of chemical equilibrium in a system with a reversible first order reaction is characterized in terms of the distribution of first passage times for the state of exact chemical equilibrium. The mean first passage time of this state is a linear function of the logarithm of the total number of particles in the system. The equilibrium fluctuations of composition in the system are characterized by the distribution of the recurrence times for the state of exact chemical equilibrium. The mean recurrence time is inversely proportional to the square root of the total number of particles in the system.


Author(s):  
Phan Thành Nam ◽  
Marcin Napiórkowski

AbstractWe consider the homogeneous Bose gas on a unit torus in the mean-field regime when the interaction strength is proportional to the inverse of the particle number. In the limit when the number of particles becomes large, we derive a two-term expansion of the one-body density matrix of the ground state. The proof is based on a cubic correction to Bogoliubov’s approximation of the ground state energy and the ground state.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (12) ◽  
pp. 1342030 ◽  
Author(s):  
KYRIAKOS PAPADODIMAS ◽  
SUVRAT RAJU

We point out that nonperturbative effects in quantum gravity are sufficient to reconcile the process of black hole evaporation with quantum mechanics. In ordinary processes, these corrections are unimportant because they are suppressed by e-S. However, they gain relevance in information-theoretic considerations because their small size is offset by the corresponding largeness of the Hilbert space. In particular, we show how such corrections can cause the von Neumann entropy of the emitted Hawking quanta to decrease after the Page time, without modifying the thermal nature of each emitted quantum. Second, we show that exponentially suppressed commutators between operators inside and outside the black hole are sufficient to resolve paradoxes associated with the strong subadditivity of entropy without any dramatic modifications of the geometry near the horizon.


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