1,021 research outputs found
Massive Gravity on a Brane
At present no theory of a massive graviton is known that is consistent with
experiments at both long and short distances. The problem is that consistency
with long distance experiments requires the graviton mass to be very small.
Such a small graviton mass however implies an ultraviolet cutoff for the theory
at length scales far larger than the millimeter scale at which gravity has
already been measured. In this paper we attempt to construct a model which
avoids this problem. We consider a brane world setup in warped AdS spacetime
and we investigate the consequences of writing a mass term for the graviton on
a the infrared brane where the local cutoff is of order a large (galactic)
distance scale. The advantage of this setup is that the low cutoff for physics
on the infrared brane does not significantly affect the predictivity of the
theory for observers localized on the ultraviolet brane. For such observers the
predictions of this theory agree with general relativity at distances smaller
than the infrared scale but go over to those of a theory of massive gravity at
longer distances. A careful analysis of the graviton two-point function,
however, reveals the presence of a ghost in the low energy spectrum. A mode
decomposition of the higher dimensional theory reveals that the ghost
corresponds to the radion field. We also investigate the theory with a brane
localized mass for the graviton on the ultraviolet brane, and show that the
physics of this case is similar to that of a conventional four dimensional
theory with a massive graviton, but with one important difference: when the
infrared brane decouples and the would-be massive graviton gets heavier than
the regular Kaluza--Klein modes, it becomes unstable and it has a finite width
to decay off the brane into the continuum of Kaluza-Klein states.Comment: 26 pages, LaTeX. v2: extended version with an appendix added about
non Fierz-Pauli mass terms. Few typos corrected. Final version appeared in
PR
Quasilocalized gravity without asymptotic flatness
We present a toy model of a generic five-dimensional warped geometry in which
the 4D graviton is not fully localized on the brane. Studying the tensor sector
of metric perturbation around this background, we find that its contribution to
the effective gravitational potential is of 4D type (1/r) at the intermediate
scales and that at the large scales it becomes 1/r^{1+alpha}, 0<alpha=< 1 being
a function of the parameters of the model (alpha=1 corresponds to the
asymptotically flat geometry). Large-distance behavior of the potential is
therefore not necessarily five-dimensional. Our analysis applies also to the
case of quasilocalized massless particles other than graviton.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure; to be published in Phys. Rev.
Unitarity constraints on the stabilized Randall-Sundrum scenario
Recently proposed stabilization mechanism of the Randall-Sundrum metric gives
rise to a scalar radion, which couples universally to matter with a weak
interaction ( TeV) scale. Demanding that gauge boson scattering as
described by the effective low enerrgy theory be unitary upto a given scale
leads to significant constraints on the mass of such a radion.Comment: 10 page Latex 2e file including 4 postscript figures. Accepted in
Journal of Physics
Wave Function of the Radion in the dS and AdS Brane Worlds
We study the linearized metric perturbation corresponding to the radion for
the generalization of the five dimensional two brane setup of Randall and
Sundrum to the case when the curvature of each brane is locally constant but
non-zero. We find the wave fuction of the radion in a coordinate system where
each brane is sitting at a fixed value of the extra coordinate. We find that
the radion now has a mass, which is negative for the case of de Sitter
branes but positive for anti de Sitter branes. We also determine the couplings
of the radion to matter on the branes, and construct the four dimensional
effective theory for the radion valid at low energies. In particular we find
that in AdS space the wave function of the radion is always normalizable and
hence its effects, though small, remain finite at arbitrarily large brane
separations.Comment: Version which appears in Phys. Rev.
Astrophysical Constraints on Modifying Gravity at Large Distances
Recently, several interesting proposals were made modifying the law of
gravity on large scales, within a sensible relativistic formulation. This
allows a precise formulation of the idea that such a modification might account
for galaxy rotation curves, instead of the usual interpretation of these curves
as evidence for dark matter. We here summarize several observational
constraints which any such modification must satisfy, and which we believe make
more challenging any interpretation of galaxy rotation curves in terms of new
gravitational physics.Comment: References added, submitted to Classical & Quantum Gravit
Brane/flux annihilation transitions and nonperturbative moduli stabilization
By extending the calculation of Kahler moduli stabilization to account for an
embiggened antibrane, we reevaluate brane/flux annihilation in a warped throat
with one stabilized Kahler modulus. We find that depending on the relative size
of various fluxes three things can occur: the decay process proceeds
unhindered, the anti-D3-branes are forbidden to decay classically, or the
entire space decompactifies. Additionally, we show that the Kahler modulus
receives a contribution from the collective 3-brane tension. This allows for a
significant change in compactified volume during the transition and possibly
mitigates some fine tuning otherwise required to achieve large volume.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, LaTeX. v2: references adde
Electrified Fuzzy Spheres and Funnels in Curved Backgrounds
We use the non-Abelian DBI action to study the dynamics of coincident
-branes in an arbitrary curved background, with the presence of a
homogenous world-volume electric field. The solutions are natural extensions of
those without electric fields, and imply that the spheres will collapse toward
zero size. We then go on to consider the intersection in a curved
background and find various dualities and automorphisms of the general
equations of motion. It is possible to map the dynamical equation of motion to
the static one via Wick rotation, however the additional spatial dependence of
the metric prevents this mapping from being invertible. Instead we find that a
double Wick rotation leaves the static equation invariant. This is very
different from the behaviour in Minkowski space. We go on to construct the most
general static fuzzy funnel solutions for an arbitrary metric either by solving
the static equations of motion, or by finding configurations which minimise the
energy. As a consistency check we construct the Abelian -brane world-volume
theory in the same generic background and find solutions consistent with energy
minimisation. In the 5-brane background we find time dependent solutions to
the equations of motion, representing a time dependent fuzzy funnel. These
solutions match those obtained from the -string picture to leading order
suggesting that the action in the large limit does not need corrections. We
conclude by generalising our solutions to higher dimensional fuzzy funnels.Comment: 38 pages, Latex; references adde
The Lyman Continuum escape fraction of galaxies at z=3.3 in the VUDS-LBC/COSMOS field
The Lyman continuum (LyC) flux escaping from high-z galaxies into the IGM is
a fundamental quantity to understand the physical processes involved in the
reionization epoch. We have investigated a sample of star-forming galaxies at
z~3.3 in order to search for possible detections of LyC photons escaping from
galaxy halos. UV deep imaging in the COSMOS field obtained with the prime focus
camera LBC at the LBT telescope was used together with a catalog of
spectroscopic redshifts obtained by the VIMOS Ultra Deep Survey (VUDS) to build
a sample of 45 galaxies at z~3.3 with L>0.5L*. We obtained deep LBC images of
galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts in the interval 3.27<z<3.40 both in the R
and deep U bands. A sub-sample of 10 galaxies apparently shows escape
fractions>28% but a detailed analysis of their properties reveals that, with
the exception of two marginal detections (S/N~2) in the U band, all the other 8
galaxies are most likely contaminated by the UV flux of low-z interlopers
located close to the high-z targets. The average escape fraction derived from
the stacking of the cleaned sample was constrained to fesc_rel<2%. The implied
HI photo-ionization rate is a factor two lower than that needed to keep the IGM
ionized at z~3, as observed in the Lyman forest of high-z QSO spectra or by the
proximity effect. These results support a scenario where high redshift,
relatively bright (L>0.5L*) star-forming galaxies alone are unable to sustain
the level of ionization observed in the cosmic IGM at z~3. Star-forming
galaxies at higher redshift and at fainter luminosities (L<<L*) can be the
major contributors to the reionization of the Universe only if their physical
properties are subject to rapid changes from z~3 to z~6-10. Alternatively,
ionizing sources could be discovered looking for fainter sources among the AGN
population at high-z.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Braneworld effective action and origin of inflation
We construct braneworld effective action in two brane Randall-Sundrum model
and show that the radion mode plays the role of a scalar field localizing
essentially nonlocal part of this action. Non-minimal curvature coupling of
this field reflects the violation of AdS/CFT-correspondence for finite values
of brane separation. Under small detuning of the brane tension from the
Randall-Sundrum flat brane value, the radion mode can play the role of
inflaton. Inflationary dynamics corresponds to branes moving apart in the field
of repelling interbrane inflaton-radion potential and implies the existence
acceleration stage caused by remnant cosmological constant at late (large brane
separation) stages of evolution. We discuss the possibility of fixing initial
conditions in this model within the concept of braneworld creation from the
tunneling or no-boundary cosmological state, which formally replaces the
conventional moduli stabilization mechanism.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, the effective action form factor is corrected for
small separation between branes and new references are adde
More about spontaneous Lorentz-violation and infrared modification of gravity
We consider a model with Lorentz-violating vector field condensates, in which
dispersion laws of all perturbations, including tensor modes, undergo
non-trivial modification in the infrared. The model is free of ghosts and
tachyons at high 3-momenta. At low 3-momenta there are ghosts, and at even
lower 3-momenta there exist tachyons. Still, with appropriate choice of
parameters, the model is phenomenologically acceptable. Beyond a certain large
distance scale and even larger time scale, the gravity of a static source
changes from that of General Relativity to that of van Dam--Veltman--Zakharov
limit of the Fierz--Pauli theory. Yet the late time cosmological evolution is
always determined by the standard Friedmann equation, modulo small correction
to the ``cosmological Planck mass'', so the modification of gravity cannot by
itself explain the accelerated expansion of the Universe. We argue that the
latter property is generic in a wide class of models with condensates.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, JHEP3.cls; Added reference
- …
