Classical Spin Transitions and Absorptive Scattering
Juan Pablo Gatica, Callum R. T. Jones

TL;DR
This paper develops an on-shell amplitudes-based method to incorporate radiation absorption effects in the classical scattering of spinning bodies, revealing universal patterns and providing explicit leading-order results for various spin transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel amplitudes-based framework for classical spin transitions and absorptive effects, with explicit results and universal patterns in scattering observables.
Findings
Universal patterns in spin transition contributions to impulse.
Explicit leading-order results for scalar, electromagnetic, and gravitational radiation absorption.
Suppression of classical observables when quantum spin transitions are forbidden.
Abstract
We describe an on-shell, amplitudes-based approach to incorporating radiation absorption effects in the post-Minkowskian scattering of generic, compact, spinning bodies. Classical spinning observables are recovered by extrapolating to large spin, results calculated with finite quantum spin- particles using the properties of spin universality and Casimir interpolation. At leading-order our results give a completely general and non-redundant parametrization of absorptive observables in terms of a finite number of Wilson coefficients associated with 3-particle mass and spin-magnitude changing on-shell amplitudes. We denote these semi-fictitious microscopic processes: \textit{classical spin transitions}. Explicit results for the leading-order impulse due to the absorption of scalar, electromagnetic and gravitational radiation, for spin transitions are given in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
