4,391 research outputs found
The initial conditions of the universe: how much isocurvature is allowed?
We investigate the constraints imposed by the current data on correlated
mixtures of adiabatic and non-adiabatic primordial perturbations. We discover
subtle flat directions in parameter space that tolerate large (~60%)
contributions of non-adiabatic fluctuations. In particular, larger values of
the baryon density and a spectral tilt are allowed. The cancellations in the
degenerate directions are explored and the role of priors elucidated.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to PR
Cosmological Perturbations Generated in the Colliding Bubble Braneworld Universe
We compute the cosmological perturbations generated in the colliding bubble
braneworld universe in which bubbles filled with five-dimensional anti-de
Sitter space (AdS5)expanding within a five dimensional de Sitter space (dS5) or
Minkowski space (M5) collide to form a (3+1) dimensional local brane on which
the cosmology is virtually identical to that of the Randall-Sundrum model. The
perturbation calculation presented here is valid to linear order but treats the
fluctuations of the expanding bubbles as (3+1) dimensional fields localized on
the bubble wall. We find that for bubbles expanding in dS5 the dominant
contribution to the power spectrum is `red' but very small except in certain
cases where the fifth dimension is not large or the bubbles have expanded to
far beyond the dS5 apparent horizon length. This paper supersedes a previous
version titled "Exactly Scale-Invariant Cosmological Perturbations From a
Colliding Bubble Braneworld Universe" in which we erroneously claimed that a
scale-invariant spectrum results for the case of bubbles expanding in M5. This
present paper corrects the errors of the previous version and extends the
analysis to the more interesting and general case of bubbles expanding in dS5.Comment: 29 pages Latex with eps figures. Major errors in the original version
of the paper corrected and analysis extended to bubbles expanding in dS
Constraints on isocurvature models from the WMAP first-year data
We investigate the constraints imposed by the first-year WMAP CMB data
extended to higher multipole by data from ACBAR, BOOMERANG, CBI and the VSA and
by the LSS data from the 2dF galaxy redshift survey on the possible amplitude
of primordial isocurvature modes. A flat universe with CDM and Lambda is
assumed, and the baryon, CDM (CI), and neutrino density (NID) and velocity
(NIV) isocurvature modes are considered. Constraints on the allowed
isocurvature contributions are established from the data for various
combinations of the adiabatic mode and one, two, and three isocurvature modes,
with intermode cross-correlations allowed. Since baryon and CDM isocurvature
are observationally virtually indistinguishable, these modes are not considered
separately. We find that when just a single isocurvature mode is added, the
present data allows an isocurvature fraction as large as 13+-6, 7+-4, and 13+-7
percent for adiabatic plus the CI, NID, and NIV modes, respectively. When two
isocurvature modes plus the adiabatic mode and cross-correlations are allowed,
these percentages rise to 47+-16, 34+-12, and 44+-12 for the combinations
CI+NID, CI+NIV, and NID+NIV, respectively. Finally, when all three isocurvature
modes and cross-correlations are allowed, the admissible isocurvature fraction
rises to 57+-9 per cent. The sensitivity of the results to the choice of prior
probability distribution is examined.Comment: 20 pages, 24 figures. Submitted to PR
Thermo-mechanical behaviour of a compacted swelling clay
Compacted unsaturated swelling clay is often considered as a possible buffer
material for deep nuclear waste disposal. An isotropic cell permitting
simultaneous control of suction, temperature and pressure was used to study the
thermo-mechanical behaviour of this clay. Tests were performed at total
suctions ranging from 9 to 110 MPa, temperature from 25 to 80 degrees C,
isotropic pressure from 0.1 to 60 MPa. It was observed that heating at constant
suction and pressure induces either swelling or contraction. The results from
compression tests at constant suction and temperature evidenced that at lower
suction, the yield pressure was lower, the elastic compressibility parameter
and the plastic compressibility parameter were higher. On the other hand, at a
similar suction, the yield pressure was slightly influenced by the temperature;
and the compressibility parameters were insensitive to temperature changes. The
thermal hardening phenomenon was equally evidenced by following a
thermo-mechanical path of loading-heating-cooling-reloading
Measuring the geometry of the Universe in the presence of isocurvature modes
The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropy constrains the geometry of
the Universe because the positions of the acoustic peaks of the angular power
spectrum depend strongly on the curvature of underlying three-dimensional
space. In this Letter we exploit current observations to determine the spatial
geometry of the Universe in the presence of isocurvature modes. Previous
analyses have always assumed that the cosmological perturbations were initially
adiabatic. A priori one might expect that allowing additional isocurvature
modes would substantially degrade the constraints on the curvature of the
Universe. We find, however, that if one considers additional data sets, the
geometry remains well constrained. When the most general isocurvature
perturbation is allowed, the CMB alone can only poorly constrain the geometry
to Omega_0=1.6+-0.3. Including large-scale structure (LSS) data one obtains
Omega_0=1.07+-0.03, and Omega_0=1.06+-0.02 when supplemented by the Hubble
Space Telescope (HST) Key Project determination of H_0 and SNIa data.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figs. Submitted to PR
Singular behaviour of the electromagnetic field
The singularities of the electromagnetic field are derived to include all the
point-like multipoles representing an electric charge and current distribution.
Firstly derived in the static case, the result is generalized to the dynamic
one. We establish a simple procedure for passing from the first, to the second
case.Comment: Latex, 21.pages, no figure
When do colliding bubbles produce an expanding universe?
It is intriguing to consider the possibility that the Big Bang of the
standard (3+1) dimensional cosmology originated from the collision of two
branes within a higher dimensional spacetime, leading to the production of a
large amount of entropy. In this paper we study, subject to certain
well-defined assumptions, under what conditions such a collision leads to an
expanding universe. We assume the absence of novel physics, so that ordinary
(4+1) -dimensional Einstein gravity remains a valid approximation. It is
necessary that the fifth dimension not become degenerate at the moment of
collision. First the case of a symmetric collision of infinitely thin branes
having a hyperbolic or flat spatial geometry is considered. We find that a
symmetric collision results in a collapsing universe on the final brane unless
the pre-existing expansion rate in the bulk just prior to the collision is
sufficiently large in comparison to the momentum transfer in the fifth
dimension. Such prior expansion may either result from negative spatial
curvature or from a positive five-dimensional cosmological constant. The
relevance of these findings to the Colliding Bubble Braneworld Universe
scenario is discussed. Finally, results from a numerical study of colliding
thick-wall branes is presented, which confirm the results of the thin-wall
approximation.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures. Minor changes and references include
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