1,377 research outputs found
Cosmological backreaction of a quantized massless scalar field
We consider the backreaction problem of a quantized minimally coupled
massless scalar field in cosmology. The adiabatically regularized stress-energy
tensor in a general Friedmann-Robertson-Walker background is approximately
evaluated by using the fact that subhorizon modes evolve adiabatically and
superhorizon modes are frozen. The vacuum energy density is verified to obey a
new first order differential equation depending on a dimensionless parameter of
order unity, which calibrates subhorizon/superhorizon division. We check the
validity of the approximation by calculating the corresponding vacuum energy
densities in fixed backgrounds, which are shown to agree with the known results
in de Sitter space and space-times undergoing power law expansions. We then
apply our findings to slow-roll inflationary models. Although backreaction
effects are found to be negligible during the near exponential expansion, the
vacuum energy density generated during this period might be important at later
stages since it decreases slower than radiation or dust.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, v2: comments and a reference added, to appear in
JCA
Ultra-Short Optical Pulse Generation with Single-Layer Graphene
Pulses as short as 260 fs have been generated in a diode-pumped low-gain
Er:Yb:glass laser by exploiting the nonlinear optical response of single-layer
graphene. The application of this novel material to solid-state bulk lasers
opens up a way to compact and robust lasers with ultrahigh repetition rates.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Journal of Nonlinear Optical Physics
& Material
Hadamard States and Adiabatic Vacua
Reversing a slight detrimental effect of the mailer related to TeXabilityComment: 10pages, LaTeX (RevTeX-preprint style
Inflaton Decay in an Alpha Vacuum
We study the alpha vacua of de Sitter space by considering the decay rate of
the inflaton field coupled to a scalar field placed in an alpha vacuum. We find
an {\em alpha dependent} Bose enhancement relative to the Bunch-Davies vacuum
and, surprisingly, no non-renormalizable divergences. We also consider a
modified alpha dependent time ordering prescription for the Feynman propagator
and show that it leads to an alpha independent result. This result suggests
that it may be possible to calculate in any alpha vacuum if we employ the
appropriate causality preserving prescription.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure, Revtex 4 preprin
Electron-electron interaction and charging effects in graphene quantum dots
We analyze charging effects in graphene quantum dots. Using a simple model,
we show that, when the Fermi level is far from the neutrality point, charging
effects lead to a shift in the electrostatic potential and the dot shows
standard Coulomb blockade features. Near the neutrality point, surface states
are partially occupied and the Coulomb interaction leads to a strongly
correlated ground state which can be approximated by either a Wigner crystal or
a Laughlin like wave function. The existence of strong correlations modify the
transport properties which show non equilibrium effects, similar to those
predicted for tunneling into other strongly correlated systems.Comment: Extended version accepted for publication at Phys. Rev.
The Weyl tensor two-point function in de Sitter spacetime
We present an expression for the Weyl-Weyl two-point function in de Sitter
spacetime, based on a recently calculated covariant graviton two-point function
with one gauge parameter. We find that the Weyl-Weyl two-point function falls
off with distance like r^{-4}, where r is spacelike coordinate separation
between the two points.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
Energy Density in Expanding Universes as Seen by Unruh's Detector
We consider the response of an Unruh detector to scalar fields in an
expanding space-time. When combining transition elements of the scalar field
Hamiltonian with the interaction operator of detector and field, one finds at
second order in time-dependent perturbation theory a transition amplitude,
which actually dominates in the ultraviolet over the first order contribution.
In particular, the detector response faithfully reproduces the particle number
implied by the stress-energy of a minimally coupled scalar field, which is
inversely proportional to the energy of a scalar mode. This finding disagrees
with the contention that in de Sitter space, the response of the detector drops
exponentially with particle energy and therefore indicates a thermal spectrum.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
Localized Particle States and Dynamics Gravitational Effects
Scalar particles--i.e., scalar-field excitations--in de Sitter space exhibit
behavior unlike either classical particles in expanding space or quantum
particles in flat spacetime. Their energies oscillate forever, and their
interactions are spread out in energy. Here it is shown that these features
characterize not only normal-mode excitations spread out over all space, but
localized particles or wave packets as well. Both one-particle and coherent
states of a massive, minimally coupled scalar field in de Sitter space,
associated with classical wave packets, are constructed explicitly. Their
energy expectation values and corresponding Unruh-DeWitt detector response
functions are calculated. Numerical evaluation of these quantities for a simple
set of classical wave packets clearly displays these novel features. Hence,
given the observed accelerating expansion of the Universe, it is possible that
observation of an ultralow-mass scalar particle could yield direct confirmation
of distinct predictions of quantum field theory in curved spacetime.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
The inflationary prediction for primordial non-gaussianity
We extend the \delta N formalism so that it gives all of the stochastic
properties of the primordial curvature perturbation \zeta if the initial field
perturbations are gaussian. The calculation requires only the knowledge of some
family of unperturbed universes. A formula is given for the normalisation \fnl
of the bispectrum of \zeta, which is the main signal of non-gaussianity.
Examples of the use of the formula are given, and its relation to cosmological
perturbation theory is explained.Comment: Revtex Latex file. 4 pages, no figures. v4: minor changes, typos
corrected, references added and updated. Version published in Physical Review
Letter
Dynamical symmetry breaking in the external gravitational and constant magnetic fields
We investigate the effects of the external gravitational and constant
magnetic fields to the dynamical symmetrybreaking. As simple models of the
dynamical symmetry breaking we consider the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (NJL) model and
the supersymmetric Nambu-Jona-Lasinio (SUSY NJL) model non-minimally
interacting with the external gravitational field and minimally interacting
with constant magnetic field. The explicit expressions for the scalar and
spinor Green functions are found up to the linear terms on the spacetime
curvature and exactly for a constant magnetic field. We obtain the effective
potential of the above models from the Green functions in the magnetic field in
curved spacetime. Calculating the effective potential numerically with the
varying curvature and/or magnetic fields we show the effects of the external
gravitational and magnetic fields to the phase structure of the theories. In
particular, increase of the curvature in the spontaneously broken chiral
symmetry phase due to the fixed magnetic field makes this phase to be less
broken. On the same time strong magnetic field quickly induces chiral symmetry
breaking even at the presence of fixed gravitational field within nonbroken
phase.Comment: 23 pages, Latex, epic.sty and eepic.sty are use
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