Το work with title Dirac equation in 2-dimensional curved spacetime, particle creation, and coupled waveguide arrays by Koke Christian, Noh Changsuk, Aggelakis Dimitrios is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Bibliographic Citation
C. Koke, C. Noh and D. G. Angelakis, "Dirac equation in 2-dimensional curved spacetime, particle creation, and coupled waveguide arrays," Ann. Phys., vol. 374, pp. 162-178, Nov. 2016. doi: 10.1016/j.aop.2016.08.013
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aop.2016.08.013
When quantum fields are coupled to gravitational fields, spontaneous particle creation may occur similarly to when they are coupled to external electromagnetic fields. A gravitational field can be incorporated as a background spacetime if the back-action of matter on the field can be neglected, resulting in modifications of the Dirac or Klein–Gordon equations for elementary fermions and bosons respectively. The semi-classical description predicts particle creation in many situations, including the expanding-universe scenario, near the event horizon of a black hole (the Hawking effect), and an accelerating observer in flat spacetime (the Unruh effect). In this work, we give a pedagogical introduction to the Dirac equation in a general 2D spacetime and show examples of spinor wave packet dynamics in flat and curved background spacetimes. In particular, we cover the phenomenon of particle creation in a time-dependent metric. Photonic analogs of these effects are then proposed, where classical light propagating in an array of coupled waveguides provides a visualisation of the Dirac spinor propagating in a curved 2D spacetime background. The extent to which such a single-particle description can be said to mimic particle creation is discussed.