25,536 research outputs found

    An unified cosmological evolution driven by a mass dimension one fermionic field

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    An unified cosmological model for an Universe filled with a mass dimension one (MDO) fermionic field plus the standard matter fields is considered. After a primordial quantum fluctuation the field slowly rolls down to the bottom of a symmetry breaking potential, driving the Universe to an inflationary regime that increases the scale factor for about 71 e-folds. After the end of inflation, the field starts to oscillate and can transfer its energy to the standard model particles through a reheating mechanism. Such a process is briefly discussed in terms of the admissible couplings of the MDO field with the electromagnetic and Higgs fields. We show that even if the field loses all its kinetic energy during reheating, it can evolve as dark matter due a gravitational coupling (of spinorial origin) with baryonic matter. Since the field acquires a constant value at the bottom of the potential, a non-null, although tiny, mass term acts as a dark energy component nowadays. Therefore, we conclude that MDO fermionic field is a good candidate to drive the whole evolution of the Universe, in such a way that the inflationary field, dark matter and dark energy are described by different manifestations of a single field.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure

    On the relation between mass of pion, fundamental physical constants and cosmological parameters

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    In this article we reconsider the old mysterious relation, advocated by Dirac and Weinberg, between the mass of the pion, the fundamental physical constants, and the Hubble parameter. By introducing the cosmological density parameters, we show how the corresponding equation may be written in a form that is invariant with respect to the expansion of the Universe and without invoking a varying gravitational "constant", as was originaly proposed by Dirac. It is suggest that, through this relation, Nature gives a hint that virtual pions dominante the "content" of the quantum vacuum

    Dynamics and Constraints of the Massive Gravitons Dark Matter Flat Cosmologies

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    We discuss the dynamics of the universe within the framework of Massive Graviton Dark Matter scenario (MGCDM) in which gravitons are geometrically treated as massive particles. In this modified gravity theory, the main effect of the gravitons is to alter the density evolution of the cold dark matter component in such a way that the Universe evolves to an accelerating expanding regime, as presently observed. Tight constraints on the main cosmological parameters of the MGCDM model are derived by performing a joint likelihood analysis involving the recent supernovae type Ia data, the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) shift parameter and the Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations (BAOs) as traced by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) red luminous galaxies. The linear evolution of small density fluctuations is also analysed in detail. It is found that the growth factor of the MGCDM model is slightly different (∼1−4\sim1-4%) from the one provided by the conventional flat Λ\LambdaCDM cosmology. The growth rate of clustering predicted by MGCDM and Λ\LambdaCDM models are confronted to the observations and the corresponding best fit values of the growth index (γ\gamma) are also determined. By using the expectations of realistic future X-ray and Sunyaev-Zeldovich cluster surveys we derive the dark-matter halo mass function and the corresponding redshift distribution of cluster-size halos for the MGCDM model. Finally, we also show that the Hubble flow differences between the MGCDM and the Λ\LambdaCDM models provide a halo redshift distribution departing significantly from the ones predicted by other DE models. These results suggest that the MGCDM model can observationally be distinguished from Λ\LambdaCDM and also from a large number of dark energy models recently proposed in the literature.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review D (12 pages, 4 figures

    Aggregation in a mixture of Brownian and ballistic wandering particles

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    In this paper, we analyze the scaling properties of a model that has as limiting cases the diffusion-limited aggregation (DLA) and the ballistic aggregation (BA) models. This model allows us to control the radial and angular scaling of the patterns, as well as, their gap distributions. The particles added to the cluster can follow either ballistic trajectories, with probability PbaP_{ba}, or random ones, with probability Prw=1−PbaP_{rw}=1-P_{ba}. The patterns were characterized through several quantities, including those related to the radial and angular scaling. The fractal dimension as a function of PbaP_{ba} continuously increases from df≈1.72d_f\approx 1.72 (DLA dimensionality) for Pba=0P_{ba}=0 to df≈2d_f\approx 2 (BA dimensionality) for Pba=1P_{ba}=1. However, the lacunarity and the active zone width exhibt a distinct behavior: they are convex functions of PbaP_{ba} with a maximum at Pba≈1/2P_{ba}\approx1/2. Through the analysis of the angular correlation function, we found that the difference between the radial and angular exponents decreases continuously with increasing PbaP_{ba} and rapidly vanishes for Pba>1/2P_{ba}>1/2, in agreement with recent results concerning the asymptotic scaling of DLA clusters.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. accepted for publication on PR

    Testing gravity with gauge-invariant polarization states of gravitational waves

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    The determination of the polarization modes of gravitational waves (GWs), and of their dispersion relations is decisive to scrutinize the viability of extended theories of gravity. A tool to investigate the polarization states of GWs is the Newman-Penrose (NP) formalism. However, if the speed of GWs is smaller than the speed of light, the number of NP variables is greater than the number of polarizations. To overpass this inconvenience we use the Bardeen formalism to describe the six possible polarization modes of GWs considering different general dispersion relations for the modes. The definition of a new gauge-invariant quantity enables an unambiguous description of the scalar longitudinal polarization mode. We apply the formalism to General Relativity, scalar-tensor theories, and f(R)f(R)-gravity. To obtain a bridge between theory and experiment, we derive an explicit relation between a physical observable (the derivative of the frequency shift of an electromagnetic signal) with the gauge-invariant variables. From this relation, we find an analytical formula for the Pulsar Timing rms response to each polarization mode. To estimate the sensitivity of a single Pulsar Timing we focus on the case of a dispersion relation of a massive particle. The sensitivity curves of the scalar longitudinal and vector polarization modes change significantly depending on the value of the effective mass. The detection (or absence of detection) of the polarization modes using the Pulsar Timing technique has decisive implications for alternative theories of gravity. Finally, the investigation of a cutoff frequency in the Pulsar Timing band can lead to a more stringent bound on the graviton mass than that presented by ground-based interferometers.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figure
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