336 research outputs found
Some anisotropic universes in the presence of imperfect fluid coupling with spatial curvature
We consider Bianchi VI spacetime, which also can be reduced to Bianchi types
VI0-V-III-I. We initially consider the most general form of the energy-momentum
tensor which yields anisotropic stress and heat flow. We then derive an
energy-momentum tensor that couples with the spatial curvature in a way so as
to cancel out the terms that arise due to the spatial curvature in the
evolution equations of the Einstein field equations. We obtain exact solutions
for the universes indefinetly expanding with constant mean deceleration
parameter. The solutions are beriefly discussed for each Bianchi type. The
dynamics of the models and fluid are examined briefly, and the models that can
approach to isotropy are determined. We conclude that even if the observed
universe is almost isotropic, this does not necessarily imply the isotropy of
the fluid (e.g., dark energy) affecting the evolution of the universe within
the context of general relativity.Comment: 17 pages, no figures; to appear in International Journal of
Theoretical Physics; in this version (which is more concise) an equation
added, some references updated and adde
Equation of state for Universe from similarity symmetries
In this paper we proposed to use the group of analysis of symmetries of the
dynamical system to describe the evolution of the Universe. This methods is
used in searching for the unknown equation of state. It is shown that group of
symmetries enforce the form of the equation of state for noninteracting scaling
multifluids. We showed that symmetries give rise the equation of state in the
form and energy density
, which
is commonly used in cosmology. The FRW model filled with scaling fluid (called
homological) is confronted with the observations of distant type Ia supernovae.
We found the class of model parameters admissible by the statistical analysis
of SNIa data. We showed that the model with scaling fluid fits well to
supernovae data. We found that and (), which can correspond to (hyper) phantom fluid, and to a
high density universe. However if we assume prior that
then the favoured model is close to concordance
CDM model. Our results predict that in the considered model with
scaling fluids distant type Ia supernovae should be brighter than in
CDM model, while intermediate distant SNIa should be fainter than in
CDM model. We also investigate whether the model with scaling fluid is
actually preferred by data over CDM model. As a result we find from
the Akaike model selection criterion prefers the model with noninteracting
scaling fluid.Comment: accepted for publication versio
Phantom Field with O(N) Symmetry in Exponential Potential
In this paper, we study the phase space of phantom model with O(\emph{N})
symmetry in exponential potential. Different from the model without O(\emph{N})
symmetry, the introduction of the symmetry leads to a lower bound on the
equation of state for the existence of stable phantom dominated attractor
phase. The reconstruction relation between the potential of O(\textit{N})
phantom system and red shift has been derived.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, replaced with the version to appear on Phys. Rev.
Bianchi type II models in the presence of perfect fluid and anisotropic dark energy
Spatially homogeneous but totally anisotropic and non-flat Bianchi type II
cosmological model has been studied in general relativity in the presence of
two minimally interacting fluids; a perfect fluid as the matter fluid and a
hypothetical anisotropic fluid as the dark energy fluid. The Einstein's field
equations have been solved by applying two kinematical ans\"{a}tze: we have
assumed the variation law for the mean Hubble parameter that yields a constant
value of deceleration parameter, and one of the components of the shear tensor
has been considered proportional to the mean Hubble parameter. We have
particularly dwelled on the accelerating models with non-divergent expansion
anisotropy as the Universe evolves. Yielding anisotropic pressure, the fluid we
consider in the context of dark energy, can produce results that can be
produced in the presence of isotropic fluid in accordance with the \Lambda CDM
cosmology. However, the derived model gives additional opportunities by being
able to allow kinematics that cannot be produced in the presence of fluids that
yield only isotropic pressure. We have obtained well behaving cases where the
anisotropy of the expansion and the anisotropy of the fluid converge to finite
values (include zero) in the late Universe. We have also showed that although
the metric we consider is totally anisotropic, the anisotropy of the dark
energy is constrained to be axially symmetric, as long as the overall energy
momentum tensor possesses zero shear stress.Comment: 15 pages; 5 figures; matches the version published in The European
Physical Journal Plu
Chaotic scalar fields as models for dark energy
We consider stochastically quantized self-interacting scalar fields as
suitable models to generate dark energy in the universe. Second quantization
effects lead to new and unexpected phenomena is the self interaction strength
is strong. The stochastically quantized dynamics can degenerate to a chaotic
dynamics conjugated to a Bernoulli shift in fictitious time, and the right
amount of vacuum energy density can be generated without fine tuning. It is
numerically observed that the scalar field dynamics distinguishes fundamental
parameters such as the electroweak and strong coupling constants as
corresponding to local minima in the dark energy landscape. Chaotic fields can
offer possible solutions to the cosmological coincidence problem, as well as to
the problem of uniqueness of vacua.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures. Replaced by final version accepted by Phys. Rev.
Double Inflation in Supergravity and the Large Scale Structure
The cosmological implication of a double inflation model with hybrid + new
inflations in supergravity is studied. The hybrid inflation drives an inflaton
for new inflation close to the origin through supergravity effects and new
inflation naturally occurs. If the total e-fold number of new inflation is
smaller than , both inflations produce cosmologically relevant density
fluctuations. Both cluster abundances and galaxy distributions provide strong
constraints on the parameters in the double inflation model assuming
standard cold dark matter scenario. The future satellite
experiments to measure the angular power spectrum of the cosmic microwave
background will make a precise determination of the model parameters possible.Comment: 19 pages (RevTeX file
Accelerated Cosmological Models in First-Order Non-Linear Gravity
The evidence of the acceleration of universe at present time has lead to
investigate modified theories of gravity and alternative theories of gravity,
which are able to explain acceleration from a theoretical viewpoint without the
need of introducing dark energy. In this paper we study alternative
gravitational theories defined by Lagrangians which depend on general functions
of the Ricci scalar invariant in minimal interaction with matter, in view of
their possible cosmological applications. Structural equations for the
spacetimes described by such theories are solved and the corresponding field
equations are investigated in the Palatini formalism, which prevents
instability problems. Particular examples of these theories are also shown to
provide, under suitable hypotheses, a coherent theoretical explanation of
earlier results concerning the present acceleration of the universe and
cosmological inflation. We suggest moreover a new possible Lagrangian,
depending on the inverse of sinh(R), which gives an explanation to the present
acceleration of the universe.Comment: 23 pages, Revtex4 fil
The CMB power spectrum at l=30-200 from QMASK
We measure the cosmic microwave background (CMB) power spectrum on angular
scales l~30-200 (1-6 degrees) from the QMASK map, which combines the data from
the QMAP and Saskatoon experiments. Since the accuracy of recent measurements
leftward of the first acoustic peak is limited by sample-variance, the large
area of the QMASK map (648 square degrees) allows us to place among the
sharpest constraints to date in this range, in good agreement with BOOMERanG
and (on the largest scales) COBE/DMR. By band-pass-filtering the QMAP and
Saskatoon maps, we are able to spatially compare them scale-by-scale to check
for beam- and pointing-related systematic errors.Comment: Revised to match accepted PRD version. Substantially expanded. Window
functions, map and covariance matrix at
http://www.hep.upenn.edu/~xuyz/qmask.htm
Universal procedure to cure future singularities of dark energy models
A systematic search for different viable models of the dark energy universe,
all of which give rise to finite-time, future singularities, is undertaken,
with the purpose to try to find a solution to this common problem. After some
work, a universal procedure to cure all future singularities is developed and
carefully tested with the help of explicit examples corresponding to each one
of the four different types of possible singularities, as classified in the
literature. The cases of a fluid with an equation of state which depends on
some parameter, of modified gravity non-minimally coupled to a matter
Lagrangian, of non-local gravity, and of isotropic turbulence in a dark fluid
universe theory are investigated in detail
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