18 research outputs found
Acceleration of the universe, vacuum metamorphosis, and the large-time asymptotic form of the heat kernel
We investigate the possibility that the late acceleration observed in the
rate of expansion of the universe is due to vacuum quantum effects arising in
curved spacetime. The theoretical basis of the vacuum cold dark matter (VCDM),
or vacuum metamorphosis, cosmological model of Parker and Raval is revisited
and improved. We show, by means of a manifestly nonperturbative approach, how
the infrared behavior of the propagator (related to the large-time asymptotic
form of the heat kernel) of a free scalar field in curved spacetime causes the
vacuum expectation value of its energy-momentum tensor to exhibit a resonance
effect when the scalar curvature R of the spacetime reaches a particular value
related to the mass of the field. we show that the back reaction caused by this
resonance drives the universe through a transition to an accelerating expansion
phase, very much in the same way as originally proposed by Parker and Raval.
Our analysis includes higher derivatives that were neglected in the earlier
analysis, and takes into account the possible runaway solutions that can follow
from these higher-derivative terms. We find that the runaway solutions do not
occur if the universe was described by the usual classical FRW solution prior
to the growth of vacuum energy-density and negative pressure (i.e., vacuum
metamorphosis) that causes the transition to an accelerating expansion of the
universe in this theory.Comment: 33 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Physical Review D15 (Dec 23, 2003).
v2: 1 reference added. No other change
Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy with Cosine-Type Quintessence
We study the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropies produced by
cosine-type quintessence models. In our analysis, effects of the adiabatic and
isocurvature fluctuations are both taken into account. For purely adiabatic
fluctuations with scale invariant spectrum, we obtain a stringent constraint on
the model parameters using the CMB data from COBE, BOOMERanG and MAXIMA.
Furthermore, it is shown that isocurvature fluctuations have significant
effects on the CMB angular power spectrum at low multipoles in some parameter
space, which may be detectable in future satellite experiments. Such a signal
may be used to test the cosine-type quintessence models.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
SN1A data and the CMB of Modified Curvature at short and long distances
The SN1a data, although inconclusive, when combined with other observations
makes a strong case that our universe is presently dominated by dark energy. We
investigate the possibility that large distance modifications of the curvature
of the universe would perhaps offer an alternative explanation of the
observation. Our calculations indicate that a universe made up of no dark
energy but instead, with a modified curvature at large scales, is not
scale-invariant, therefore quite likely it is ruled out by the CMB
observations. The sensitivity of the CMB spectrum is checked for the whole
range of mode modifications of large or short distance physics. The spectrum is
robust against modifications of short-distance physics and the UV cutoff when:
the initial state is the adiabatic vacuum, and the inflationary background
space is de Sitter.Comment: 13 pages, 2 eps figures, typos corrected, references added; to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Elemental imaging of MRI contrast agents: benchmarking of LA-ICP-MS to MRI
Laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) has been used to map the spatial distribution of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents (Gd-based) in histological sections in order to explore synergies with in vivo MRI. Images from respective techniques are presented for two separate studies namely (1) convection enhanced delivery of a Gd nanocomplex (developmental therapeutic) into rat brain and (2) convection enhanced delivery, with co-infusion of Magnevist (commercial Gd contrast agent) and Carboplatin (chemotherapy drug), into pig brain. The LA technique was shown to be a powerful compliment to MRI not only in offering improved sensitivity, spatial resolution and signal quantitation but also in giving added value regarding the fate of administered agents (Gd and Pt agents). Furthermore simultaneous measurement of Fe enabled assignment of an anomalous contrast enhancement region in rat brain to haemorrhage at the infusion site