Cosmic cable
Abstract
I investigate the relativistic mechanics of an extended "cable" in an arbitrary static, spherically symmetric spacetime. Such hypothetical bodies have been proposed as tests of energy and thermodynamics: by lowering objects toward a black hole, scooping up Hawking radiation, or mining energy from the expansion of the universe. I review existing work on stationary cables, which demonstrates an interesting "redshift" of tension, and extend to a case of rigid motion. By using a partly restrained cable to turn a turbine, the energy harvested is up to the equivalent of the cable's rest mass, concurring with the quasistatic case. Still, the total Killing energy of the system is conserved.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1911.08726,
title = {Cosmic cable},
author = {Colin MacLaurin},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1911.08726},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
6 pages, 0 figures, submitted to the proceedings of the 2018 Marcel Grossmann conference in Rome