41 research outputs found
Odds of observing the multiverse
Eternal inflation predicts our observable universe lies within a bubble (or
pocket universe) embedded in a volume of inflating space. The interior of the
bubble undergoes inflation and standard cosmology, while the bubble walls
expand outward and collide with other neighboring bubbles. The collisions
provide either an opportunity to make a direct observation of the multiverse
or, if they produce unacceptable anisotropy, a threat to inflationary theory.
The probability of an observer in our bubble detecting the effects of
collisions has an absolute upper bound set by the odds of being in the part of
our bubble that lies in the forward light-cone of a collision; in the case of
collisions with bubbles of identical vacua, this bound given by the bubble
nucleation rate times (, where is the
Hubble scale outside the bubbles and is the scale of the second
round of inflation that occurs inside our bubble. Similar results were obtained
by Freigovel \emph{et al.} using a different method for the case of collisions
with bubbles of much larger cosmological constant; here it is shown to hold in
the case of collisions with identical bubbles as well. A significant error in a
previous draft was corrected in order to arrive at this result.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures; a significant error was correcte
On 'Nothing'
Nothing---the absence of spacetime---can be either an endpoint of tunneling,
as in the bubble of nothing, or a starting point for tunneling, as in the
quantum creation of a universe. We argue that these two tunnelings can be
treated within a unified framework, and that, in both cases, nothing should be
thought of as the limit of anti-de Sitter space in which the curvature length
approaches zero. To study nothing, we study decays in models with
perturbatively stabilized extra dimensions, which admit not just bubbles of
nothing---topology-changing transitions in which the extra dimensions pinch off
and a hole forms in spacetime---but also a whole family of topology-preserving
transitions that nonetheless smoothly hollow out and approach the bubble of
nothing in one limit. The bubble solutions that are close to this limit,
bubbles of next-to- nothing, give us a controlled setting in which to
understand nothing. Armed with this understanding, we are able to embed
proposed mechanisms for the reverse process, tunneling from nothing to
something, within the relatively secure foundation of the Coleman-De Luccia
formalism and show that the Hawking-Turok instanton does not mediate the
quantum creation of a universe.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, v2: minor updates, published as "On 'Nothing'
as an infinitely negatively curved spacetime
Bubbles of Nothing and the Fastest Decay in the Landscape
The rate and manner of vacuum decay are calculated in an explicit flux
compactification, including all thick-wall and gravitational effects. For
landscapes built of many units of a single flux, the fastest decay is usually
to discharge just one unit. By contrast, for landscapes built of a single unit
each of many different fluxes, the fastest decay is usually to discharge all
the flux at once, which destabilizes the radion and begets a bubble of nothing.
By constructing the bubble of nothing as the limit in which ever more flux is
removed, we gain new insight into the bubble's appearance. Finally, we describe
a new instanton that mediates simultaneous flux tunneling and
decompactification. Our model is the thin-brane approximation to
six-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell theory.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures; v2: minor change
Bubble Baryogenesis
We propose an alternative mechanism of baryogenesis in which a scalar baryon
undergoes a percolating first-order phase transition in the early Universe. The
potential barrier that divides the phases contains explicit B and CP violation
and the corresponding instanton that mediates decay is therefore asymmetric.
The nucleation and growth of these asymmetric bubbles dynamically generates
baryons, which thermalize after percolation; bubble collision dynamics can also
add to the asymmetry yield. We present an explicit toy model that undergoes
bubble baryogenesis, and numerically study the evolution of the baryon
asymmetry through bubble nucleation and growth, bubble collisions, and washout.
We discuss more realistic constructions, in which the scalar baryon and its
potential arise amongst the color-breaking minima of the MSSM, or in the
supersymmetric neutrino seesaw mechanism. Phenomenological consequences, such
as gravitational waves, and possible applications to asymmetric dark-matter
generation are also discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, references added, changes reflect published
versio
Giant Leaps and Minimal Branes in Multi-Dimensional Flux Landscapes
There is a standard story about decay in multi-dimensional flux landscapes:
that from any state, the fastest decay is to take a small step, discharging one
flux unit at a time; that fluxes with the same coupling constant are
interchangeable; and that states with N units of a given flux have the same
decay rate as those with -N. We show that this standard story is false. The
fastest decay is a giant leap that discharges many different fluxes in unison;
this decay is mediated by a 'minimal' brane that wraps the internal manifold
and exhibits behavior not visible in the effective theory. We discuss the
implications for the cosmological constant.Comment: Minor updates to agree with published version. 9 pages, 4 figure
Populating the Whole Landscape
Every de Sitter vacuum can transition to every other de Sitter vacuum despite
any obstacle, despite intervening anti-de Sitter sinks, despite not being
connected by an instanton. Eternal inflation populates the whole landscape.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, minor improvement