Abstract
The electrodynamic theory of continuous media is probably the most convenient platform when trying to construct analog gravity theories. Quite naturally, this topic has gained considerable interest. One peculiar but not so very known feature in this context is the unconventional behavior of radiation energy and momentum in cases where superluminal fluid velocities are encountered, what, as known, is a major ingredient in analog gravity theories. These peculiar features are intimately connected with the spacelike character of Minkowski's four-momentum in electrodynamics. Here, we first consider an artificial model in which a Kerr-induced superluminal region is created in the right-hand region ($z>0$) in a left-moving, originally subluminal, fluid. We analyze the behavior of energy density, Poynting vector, and momentum density, and calculate the force on the artificial black hole horizon. Also, we delve into quantal aspects, looking for eventual production of particles associated with the sudden creation of the horizon, finding, however, that no particles are predicted to occur. The present paper continues a previous investigation by the author on the same topic, in Phys. Rev. A {\bf 100}, 032109 (2019). The subject as such is closely related to the famous Abraham-Minkowski problem.
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