Black holes: new horizons
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Hackensack, NJ [u.a.]
World Scientific
[2013]
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturangaben |
Beschreibung: | VIII, 256 Seiten graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9789814425698 |
Internformat
MARC
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Black holes |b new horizons |c ed.: Sean Alan Hayward |
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500 | |a Literaturangaben | ||
505 | 8 | |a 1. An introduction to local black hole horizons in the 3+1 approach to general relativity / José Luis Jaramillo -- 2. Physical aspects of quasi-local black hole horizons / Alex B. Nielsen -- 3. On uniqueness results for static, asymptotically flat initial data containing MOTS / Alberto Carrasco and Marc Mars -- 4. Horizons in the near-equilibrium regime / Ivan Booth -- 5. Isolated horizons in classical and quantum gravity / Jonathan Engle and Tomáš Liko -- 6. Quantum thermometers in stationary space-times with horizons / Sergio Zerbini -- 7. Relativistic thermodynamics / Sean A. Hayward -- 8. Trapped surfaces / J.M.M. Senovilla -- 9. Some examples of trapped surfaces / I. Bengtsson | |
505 | 8 | |a Black holes, once just fascinating theoretical predictions of how gravity warps space-time according to Einstein's theory, are now generally accepted as astrophysical realities, formed by post-supernova collapse, or as supermassive black holes mysteriously found at the cores of most galaxies, powering active galactic nuclei, the most powerful objects in the universe. Theoretical understanding has progressed in recent decades with a wider realization that local concepts should characterize black holes, rather than the global concepts found in textbooks. In particular, notions such as trapping horizon allow physically meaningful quantities and equations, describing how a black hole evolves. This has led to discoveries in fields as diverse as classical and numerical general relativity, differential geometry, thermodynamics, quantum field theory, and quantum gravity. There is heretofore no one volume which covers all the main aspects, so this volume collects together summaries and recent research, each chapter written by an expert or experts in a given field. This is intended for readers at a graduate level upwards, who wish to learn about the wide range of research concerning black holes | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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any_adam_object | |
author2 | Hayward, Sean Alan |
author2_role | edt |
author2_variant | s a h sa sah |
author_facet | Hayward, Sean Alan |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV043580955 |
callnumber-first | Q - Science |
callnumber-label | QB843 |
callnumber-raw | QB843.B55 |
callnumber-search | QB843.B55 |
callnumber-sort | QB 3843 B55 |
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contents | 1. An introduction to local black hole horizons in the 3+1 approach to general relativity / José Luis Jaramillo -- 2. Physical aspects of quasi-local black hole horizons / Alex B. Nielsen -- 3. On uniqueness results for static, asymptotically flat initial data containing MOTS / Alberto Carrasco and Marc Mars -- 4. Horizons in the near-equilibrium regime / Ivan Booth -- 5. Isolated horizons in classical and quantum gravity / Jonathan Engle and Tomáš Liko -- 6. Quantum thermometers in stationary space-times with horizons / Sergio Zerbini -- 7. Relativistic thermodynamics / Sean A. Hayward -- 8. Trapped surfaces / J.M.M. Senovilla -- 9. Some examples of trapped surfaces / I. Bengtsson Black holes, once just fascinating theoretical predictions of how gravity warps space-time according to Einstein's theory, are now generally accepted as astrophysical realities, formed by post-supernova collapse, or as supermassive black holes mysteriously found at the cores of most galaxies, powering active galactic nuclei, the most powerful objects in the universe. Theoretical understanding has progressed in recent decades with a wider realization that local concepts should characterize black holes, rather than the global concepts found in textbooks. In particular, notions such as trapping horizon allow physically meaningful quantities and equations, describing how a black hole evolves. This has led to discoveries in fields as diverse as classical and numerical general relativity, differential geometry, thermodynamics, quantum field theory, and quantum gravity. There is heretofore no one volume which covers all the main aspects, so this volume collects together summaries and recent research, each chapter written by an expert or experts in a given field. This is intended for readers at a graduate level upwards, who wish to learn about the wide range of research concerning black holes |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)951019784 (DE-599)GBV747605610 |
dewey-full | 523.8875 |
dewey-hundreds | 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics |
dewey-ones | 523 - Specific celestial bodies and phenomena |
dewey-raw | 523.8875 |
dewey-search | 523.8875 |
dewey-sort | 3523.8875 |
dewey-tens | 520 - Astronomy and allied sciences |
discipline | Physik |
format | Book |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789814425698 |
language | English |
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physical | VIII, 256 Seiten graph. Darst. |
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spelling | Black holes new horizons ed.: Sean Alan Hayward Hackensack, NJ [u.a.] World Scientific [2013] © 2013 VIII, 256 Seiten graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturangaben 1. An introduction to local black hole horizons in the 3+1 approach to general relativity / José Luis Jaramillo -- 2. Physical aspects of quasi-local black hole horizons / Alex B. Nielsen -- 3. On uniqueness results for static, asymptotically flat initial data containing MOTS / Alberto Carrasco and Marc Mars -- 4. Horizons in the near-equilibrium regime / Ivan Booth -- 5. Isolated horizons in classical and quantum gravity / Jonathan Engle and Tomáš Liko -- 6. Quantum thermometers in stationary space-times with horizons / Sergio Zerbini -- 7. Relativistic thermodynamics / Sean A. Hayward -- 8. Trapped surfaces / J.M.M. Senovilla -- 9. Some examples of trapped surfaces / I. Bengtsson Black holes, once just fascinating theoretical predictions of how gravity warps space-time according to Einstein's theory, are now generally accepted as astrophysical realities, formed by post-supernova collapse, or as supermassive black holes mysteriously found at the cores of most galaxies, powering active galactic nuclei, the most powerful objects in the universe. Theoretical understanding has progressed in recent decades with a wider realization that local concepts should characterize black holes, rather than the global concepts found in textbooks. In particular, notions such as trapping horizon allow physically meaningful quantities and equations, describing how a black hole evolves. This has led to discoveries in fields as diverse as classical and numerical general relativity, differential geometry, thermodynamics, quantum field theory, and quantum gravity. There is heretofore no one volume which covers all the main aspects, so this volume collects together summaries and recent research, each chapter written by an expert or experts in a given field. This is intended for readers at a graduate level upwards, who wish to learn about the wide range of research concerning black holes Schwarzes Loch (DE-588)4053793-6 gnd rswk-swf Black holes (Astronomy) Schwarzes Loch (DE-588)4053793-6 s DE-604 Hayward, Sean Alan edt DE-601 pdf/application http://www.gbv.de/dms/tib-ub-hannover/747605610.pdf Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Black holes new horizons 1. An introduction to local black hole horizons in the 3+1 approach to general relativity / José Luis Jaramillo -- 2. Physical aspects of quasi-local black hole horizons / Alex B. Nielsen -- 3. On uniqueness results for static, asymptotically flat initial data containing MOTS / Alberto Carrasco and Marc Mars -- 4. Horizons in the near-equilibrium regime / Ivan Booth -- 5. Isolated horizons in classical and quantum gravity / Jonathan Engle and Tomáš Liko -- 6. Quantum thermometers in stationary space-times with horizons / Sergio Zerbini -- 7. Relativistic thermodynamics / Sean A. Hayward -- 8. Trapped surfaces / J.M.M. Senovilla -- 9. Some examples of trapped surfaces / I. Bengtsson Black holes, once just fascinating theoretical predictions of how gravity warps space-time according to Einstein's theory, are now generally accepted as astrophysical realities, formed by post-supernova collapse, or as supermassive black holes mysteriously found at the cores of most galaxies, powering active galactic nuclei, the most powerful objects in the universe. Theoretical understanding has progressed in recent decades with a wider realization that local concepts should characterize black holes, rather than the global concepts found in textbooks. In particular, notions such as trapping horizon allow physically meaningful quantities and equations, describing how a black hole evolves. This has led to discoveries in fields as diverse as classical and numerical general relativity, differential geometry, thermodynamics, quantum field theory, and quantum gravity. There is heretofore no one volume which covers all the main aspects, so this volume collects together summaries and recent research, each chapter written by an expert or experts in a given field. This is intended for readers at a graduate level upwards, who wish to learn about the wide range of research concerning black holes Schwarzes Loch (DE-588)4053793-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4053793-6 |
title | Black holes new horizons |
title_auth | Black holes new horizons |
title_exact_search | Black holes new horizons |
title_full | Black holes new horizons ed.: Sean Alan Hayward |
title_fullStr | Black holes new horizons ed.: Sean Alan Hayward |
title_full_unstemmed | Black holes new horizons ed.: Sean Alan Hayward |
title_short | Black holes |
title_sort | black holes new horizons |
title_sub | new horizons |
topic | Schwarzes Loch (DE-588)4053793-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Schwarzes Loch |
url | http://www.gbv.de/dms/tib-ub-hannover/747605610.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv | AT haywardseanalan blackholesnewhorizons |