Statistical mechanics and Lorentz violation
- 8 December 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 70 (12)
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.70.125007
Abstract
The theory of statistical mechanics is studied in the presence of Lorentz-violating background fields. The analysis is performed using the Standard-Model Extension (SME) together with a Jaynesian formulation of statistical inference. Conventional laws of thermodynamics are obtained in the presence of a perturbed hamiltonian that contains the Lorentz violating terms. As an example, properties of the nonrelativistic ideal gas are calculated in detail. To lowest order in Lorentz violation, the scalar thermodynamic variables are only corrected by a rotationally invariant combination of parameters that mimics a (frame dependent) effective mass. Spin couplings can induce a temperature independent polarization in the classical gas that is not present in the conventional case. Precision measurements in the residual expectation values of the magnetic moment of Fermi gases in the limit of high temperature may provide interesting limits on these parameters.Comment: 7 pages, revteKeywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analytical construction of a nonperturbative vacuum for the open bosonic stringPhysical Review D, 2001
- Off-Shell Structure of the String Sigma ModelPhysical Review Letters, 2000
- Lorentz-violating extension of the standard modelPhysical Review D, 1998
- violation and the standard modelPhysical Review D, 1997
- Expectation values, Lorentz invariance, and CPT in the open bosonic stringPhysics Letters B, 1996
- CPT and stringsNuclear Physics B, 1991
- Photon and graviton masses in string theoriesPhysical Review Letters, 1991
- Gravitational phenomenology in higher-dimensional theories and stringsPhysical Review D, 1989
- Phenomenological gravitational constraints on strings and higher-dimensional theoriesPhysical Review Letters, 1989
- Spontaneous breaking of Lorentz symmetry in string theoryPhysical Review D, 1989