Black hole collapse simulated by vacuum fluctuations with a moving semi-transparent mirror

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Publication:6207939

DOI10.1103/PHYSREVD.77.045011arXiv0712.4141MaRDI QIDQ6207939FDOQ6207939

J. Haro, Emilio Elizalde

Publication date: 26 December 2007

Abstract: Creation of scalar massless particles in two-dimensional Minkowski space-time--as predicted by the dynamical Casimir effect--is studied for the case of a semitransparent mirror initially at rest, then accelerating for some finite time, along a trajectory that simulates a black hole collapse (defined by Walker, and Carlitz and Willey), and finally moving with constant velocity. When the reflection and transmission coefficients are those in the model proposed by Barton, Calogeracos, and Nicolaevici [r(w)=ialpha/(w+ialpha) and s(w)=w/(w+ialpha), with alphageq0], the Bogoliubov coefficients on the back side of the mirror can be computed exactly. This allows us to prove that, when alpha is very large (case of an ideal, perfectly reflecting mirror) a thermal emission of scalar massless particles obeying Bose-Einstein statistics is radiated from the mirror (a black body radiation), in accordance with results previously obtained in the literature. However, when alpha is finite (semitransparent mirror, a physically realistic situation) the striking result is obtained that the thermal emission of scalar massless particles obeys Fermi-Dirac statistics. We also show here that the reverse change of statistics takes place in a bidimensional fermionic model for massless particles, namely that the Fermi-Dirac statistics for the completely reflecting situation will turn into the Bose-Einstein statistics for a partially reflecting, physical mirror.












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