Hawking Radiation and Classical Tunneling
Eugene R. Tracy, Dmitriy Zhigunov

TL;DR
This paper develops a mathematical framework using variational and ray phase space methods to analyze acoustic analogs of Hawking radiation, deriving a normal form that models wave tunneling near an event horizon.
Contribution
It introduces a novel extension of ray-based theory to derive a normal form for acoustic wave tunneling, linking it to Hawking radiation analogs.
Findings
Normal form for wave evolution near the horizon
Acoustic model reduces to a tunneling process
Potential for improved numerical simulations
Abstract
Acoustic waves in fluids undergoing the transition from sub- to supersonic flow satisfy governing equations similar to those for light waves in the immediate vicinity of a black hole event horizon. This acoustic analogy has been used by Unruh and others as a conceptual model for `Hawking radiation.' Here we use variational methods, originally introduced by Brizard for the study of linearized MHD, and ray phase space methods, to analyze linearized acoustics in the presence of background flows. The variational formulation endows the evolution equations with natural Hermitian and symplectic structures that prove useful for later analysis. We derive a normal form governing the wave evolution in the vicinity of the `event horizon.' This shows that the acoustic model can be reduced locally (in ray phase space) to a standard (scalar) tunneling process weakly coupled to a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows · Aerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet Flows
