Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2007. — 298 p. — (Lecture Notes in Physics 718). — ISBN: 978-3-540-70859-9 (eBook), 978-3-642-08984-8 (Softcover), 978-3-540-70858-2 (Hardcover).
Recently, analogies between laboratory physics (e.g. quantum optics and condensed matter) and gravitational/cosmological phenomena such as black holes have attracted an increasing interest. Especially in view of the tremendous progress of the experimental capabilities (e.g. regarding superfluids such as liquid Helium or gaseous Bose-Einstein condensates), exotic quantum effects such as Hawking radiation might come into reach for the first time.
This book contains a series of selected lectures devoted to this new and rapidly developing interdisciplinary field of research. Various analogies connecting (apparently) different areas in physics are presented in order to bridge the gap between them and to provide an alternative point of view - which will provide a deeper insight for graduate students as well as senior scientists.
The Analogue Between Rimfall and Black Holes
Effective Horizons in the Laboratory
Quantum Phase Transitions from Topology in Momentum Space
Superfluid 3He as a Model System for Cosmology - Experimental Point of View
Dynamical Aspects of Analogue Gravity: The Backreaction of Quantum Fluctuations in Dilute Bose-Einstein Condensates
Analogue Space-time Based on 2-Component Bose-Einstein Condensates
Links. Relating Different Physical Systems Through the Common QFT Algebraic Structure
The Classical and Quantum Roots of Pauli’s Spin-statistics Relation
Black Hole Lasers Revisited
Cosmic Strings