51,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
payback
26 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Traversable wormholes have become a subject of intensive studies since 1988 when Morris and Thorne published their paper which put forward the energy conditions for traversable wormholes. A number of researchers have calculated the stress-energy tensors of different fields but failed to find one that meets the requirement of the wormhole geometry. Some others find different schemes to sustain traversable wormholes but either on the Planck scale or hypothetically on a macroscopic scale. Groves has developed a method to compute the renormalized stress-energy tensor for a quantized massive spin…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Traversable wormholes have become a subject of intensive studies since 1988 when Morris and Thorne published their paper which put forward the energy conditions for traversable wormholes. A number of researchers have calculated the stress-energy tensors of different fields but failed to find one that meets the requirement of the wormhole geometry. Some others find different schemes to sustain traversable wormholes but either on the Planck scale or hypothetically on a macroscopic scale. Groves has developed a method to compute the renormalized stress-energy tensor for a quantized massive spin 1/2 field in a general static spherically symmetric spacetime. Using this method, I have computed the renormalized stress-energy tensors of two quantized massive spin 1/2 fields in four static spherically symmetric wormhole spacetimes. The results of my calculation suggest that these two fields can be considered exotic and thus can sustain wormhole geometries. However, the wormholes that theysustain are microscopic and are not traversable for human beings.
Autorenporträt
I was born in Beijing, China. I had worked as a journalist in China for some years. I came to the U.S. to pursue graduate studies in 1996. At first I studied anthropology and got a Master's degree. Later I began to study physics. I received a Ph.D. degree in physics at the University of Missouri in 2012. I will do research in physics in the future.