Particle production and complex path analysis

K. Srinivasan and T. Padmanabhan
Phys. Rev. D 60, 024007 – Published 14 June 1999
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Abstract

This paper discusses particle production in Schwarzschild-like spacetimes and in a uniform electric field. Both problems are approached using the method of complex path analysis which is used to describe tunnelling processes in semiclassical quantum mechanics. Particle production in Schwarzschild-like spacetimes with a horizon is obtained here by a new and simple semiclassical method based on the method of complex paths. Hawking radiation is obtained in the (t,r) coordinate system of the standard Schwarzschild metric without requiring the Kruskal extension. The coordinate singularity present at the horizon manifests itself as a singularity in the expression for the semiclassical propagator for a scalar field. We give a prescription whereby this singularity is regularized with Hawking’s result being recovered. The equation satisfied by a scalar field is also reduced to solving a one-dimensional effective Schrödinger equation with a potential (1/x2) near the horizon. Constructing the action for a fictitious nonrelativistic particle moving in this potential and applying the above mentioned prescription, one again recovers Hawking radiation. In the case of the electric field, standard quantum field theoretic methods can be used to obtain particle production in a purely time-dependent gauge. In a purely space-dependent gauge, however, the tunnelling interpretation has to be resorted to in order to recover the previous result. We attempt, in this paper, to provide a tunnelling description using the formal method of complex paths for both the time and space dependent gauges. The usefulness of such a common description becomes evident when “mixed” gauges, which are functions of both space and time variables, are analyzed. We report, in this paper, certain mixed gauges which have the interesting property that mode functions in these gauges are found to be a combination of elementary functions unlike the standard modes which are transcendental parabolic cylinder functions. Finally, we present an attempt to interpret particle production by the electric field as a tunnelling process between the two sectors of the Rindler spacetime.

  • Received 11 December 1998

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.60.024007

©1999 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

K. Srinivasan* and T. Padmanabhan

  • IUCAA, Post Bag 4, Ganeshkhind, Pune 411 007, India

  • *Electronic address: srini@iucaa.ernet.in
  • Electronic address: paddy@iucaa.ernet.in

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Vol. 60, Iss. 2 — 15 July 1999

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