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Title: Classical radiation by free-falling charges in de Sitter spacetime

Journal Article · · Physical Review. D, Particles Fields
;  [1];  [2]
  1. ITEP, B. Cheremushkinskaya, 25, 117218, Moscow (Russian Federation)
  2. Max-Planck-Institut fuer Gravitationsphysik (Albert-Einstein-Institut), Am Muehlenberg 1, 14476 Golm (Germany)

We study the classical radiation emitted by free-falling charges in de Sitter spacetime coupled to different kinds of fields. Specifically we consider the cases of the electromagnetic field, linearized gravity, and scalar fields with arbitrary mass and curvature coupling. Given an arbitrary set of such charges, there is a generic result for sufficiently late times which corresponds to each charge being surrounded by a field zone with negligible influence from the other charges. Furthermore, we explicitly find a static solution in the static patch adapted to a charge (implying no energy loss by the charge) which can be regularly extended beyond the horizon to the full de Sitter spacetime, and show that any other solution decays at late times to this one. On the other hand, for nonconformal scalar fields the inertial observers naturally associated with spatially flat coordinates will see a nonvanishing flux far from the horizon, which will fall off more slowly than the inverse square of the distance for sufficiently light fields (m{sup 2}+{xi}R<5H{sup 2}/4) and give rise to a total integrated flux that grows unboundedly with the radius. This can be qualitatively interpreted as a consequence of a classical parametric amplification of the field generated by the charge due to the time-dependent background spacetime. Most of these results do not hold for massless minimally coupled scalar fields, whose special behavior is analyzed separately.

OSTI ID:
21420971
Journal Information:
Physical Review. D, Particles Fields, Vol. 82, Issue 4; Other Information: DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.82.044035; (c) 2010 American Institute of Physics; ISSN 0556-2821
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English