Recognition: unknown
Lectures on quantum energy inequalities
read the original abstract
Quantum field theory violates all the classical energy conditions of general relativity. Nonetheless, it turns out that quantum field theories satisfy remnants of the classical energy conditions, known as Quantum Energy Inequalities (QEIs), that have been developed by various authors since the original pioneering work of Ford in 1978. These notes provide an introduction to QEIs and also to some of the techniques of quantum field theory in curved spacetime (particularly, the use of microlocal analysis together with the algebraic formulation of QFT) that enable rigorous and general QEIs to be derived. Specific examples are computed for the free scalar field and their consequences are discussed. QEIs are also derived for the class of unitary, positive energy conformal field theories in two spacetime dimensions. In that setting it is also possible to determine the probability distribution for individual measurements of certain smearings of the stress-energy tensor in the vacuum state.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 3 Pith papers
-
Quantum Field Theory of Black Hole Perturbations with Backreaction VI. Apparent Horizons, Quasi-Local Mass and Effective Classical Metrics
The apparent horizon shape is derived to second order for perturbed evaporating black holes, and an effective classical metric is obtained from quantum expectation values of the reconstructed spacetime.
-
Electromagnetic, gravitational wave, and static gravitational transmission through throat spacetimes: a constraint-wave asymmetry
In static spherically symmetric throat spacetimes, EM and GW perturbations (ℓ≥1) experience strong sub-barrier suppression below their barrier-top frequencies, while the static gravitational monopole (ℓ=0) transmits w...
-
Energy conditions in static, spherically symmetric spacetimes and effective geometries
A logarithmic correction to Schwarzschild in static spherical symmetry obeys all classical energy conditions and serves as an effective exterior for horizon-bearing and horizonless compact objects.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.