3,112 research outputs found

    Rotating Black Holes/Rings at Future Colliders

    Full text link
    The hierarchy between the electroweak and Planck scales can be reduced when the extra dimensions are compactified with large volume or with warped geometry, resulting in the fundamental scale of the order of TeV. In such a scenario, one can experimentally study the physics above the Planck scale. We discuss black hole/ring production at future colliders.Comment: minor corrections in Appendix; irrelevant files delete

    Rotating black holes at future colliders II: Anisotropic scalar field emission

    Full text link
    This is the sequel to the first paper of the series, where we have discussed the Hawking radiation from five-dimensional rotating black holes for spin 0, 1/2 and 1 brane fields in the low frequency regime. We consider the emission of a brane localized scalar field from rotating black holes in general space-time dimensions without relying on the low frequency expansions.Comment: 12 pages, 24 figure

    Rotating black holes at future colliders: Greybody factors for brane fields

    Get PDF
    We study theoretical aspects of the rotating black hole production and evaporation in the extra dimension scenarios with TeV scale gravity, within the mass range in which the higher dimensional Kerr solution provides good description. We evaluate the production cross section of black holes taking their angular momenta into account. We find that it becomes larger than the Schwarzschild radius squared, which is conventionally utilized in literature, and our result nicely agrees with the recent numerical study by Yoshino and Nambu within a few percent error for higher dimensional case. In the same approximation to obtain the above result, we find that the production cross section becomes larger for the black hole with larger angular momentum. Second, we derive the generalized Teukolsky equation for spin 0, 1/2 and 1 brane fields in the higher dimensional Kerr geometry and explicitly show that it is separable in any dimensions. For five-dimensional (Randall-Sundrum) black hole, we obtain analytic formulae for the greybody factors in low frequency expansion and we present the power spectra of the Hawking radiation as well as their angular dependence. Phenomenological implications of our result are briefly sketched.Comment: Typo in basic equation corrected; Following calculations and results unchange

    Higgs inflation in metric and Palatini formalisms: Required suppression of higher dimensional operators

    Get PDF
    We investigate the sensitivity of Higgs(-like) inflation to higher dimensional operators in the nonminimal couplings and in the potential, both in the metric and Palatini formalisms. We find that, while inflationary predictions are relatively stable against the higher dimensional operators around the attractor point in the metric formalism, they are extremely sensitive in the Palatini one: for the latter, inflationary predictions are spoiled by ξ4106|\xi_4| \gtrsim 10^{-6} in the nonminimal couplings (ξ2ϕ2+ξ4ϕ4+)R(\xi_2 \phi^2 + \xi_4 \phi^4 + \cdots)R, or by λ61016|\lambda_6| \gtrsim 10^{-16} in the Jordan-frame potential λ4ϕ4+λ6ϕ6+\lambda_4 \phi^4 + \lambda_6 \phi^6 + \cdots (both in Planck units). This extreme sensitivity results from the absence of attractor in the Palatini formalism. Our study underscores the challenge of realizing inflationary models with the nonminimal coupling in the Palatini formalism.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures; minor typo correction; references adde

    Hillclimbing inflation in metric and Palatini formulations

    Get PDF
    A new setup of cosmic inflation with a periodic inflaton potential and conformal factor is discussed in the metric and Palatini formulations of gravity. As a concrete example, we focus on a natural-inflation-like inflaton potential, and show that the inflationary predictions fall into the allowed region of cosmic microwave background observations in both formulations.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure

    Higgs inflation still alive

    Full text link
    The observed value of the Higgs mass indicates that the Higgs potential becomes small and flat at the scale around 101710^{17}GeV. Having this fact in mind, we reconsider the Higgs inflation scenario proposed by Bezrukov and Shaposhnikov. It turns out that the non-minimal coupling ξ\xi of the Higgs-squared to the Ricci scalar can be smaller than ten. For example, ξ=7\xi=7 corresponds to the tensor-to-scalar ratio r0.2r\simeq0.2, which is consistent with the recent observation by BICEP2.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; Version to appear on Physical Review Letters, footnotes added and expanded, references added, note added (v2

    Higgs inflation from Standard Model criticality

    Get PDF
    The observed Higgs mass MH=125.9±0.4M_H=125.9\pm0.4GeV leads to the criticality of the Standard Model, that is, the Higgs potential becomes flat around the scale 10171810^{17\text{--}18}GeV for the top mass 171.3171.3GeV. Earlier we have proposed a Higgs inflation scenario in which this criticality plays a crucial role. In this paper, we investigate detailed cosmological predictions of this scenario in light of the latest Planck and BICEP2 results. We find that this scenario can be consistent with the constraint from the running index too. We also compute the Higgs one-loop effective potential including the Higgs portal scalar dark matter, with the two-loop renormalization group equations and find a constraint on the coupling between Higgs and dark matter depending on the inflationary parameters.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures; Accepted by PRD(v2

    Di-higgs enhancement by neutral scalar as probe of new colored sector

    Get PDF
    We study a class of models in which the Higgs pair production is enhanced at hadron colliders by an extra neutral scalar. The scalar particle is produced by the gluon fusion via a loop of new colored particles, and decays into di-Higgs through its mixing with the Standard Model Higgs. Such a colored particle can be the top/bottom partner, such as in the dilaton model, or a colored scalar which can be triplet, sextet, octet, etc., called leptoquark, diquark, coloron, etc., respectively. We examine the experimental constraints from the latest Large Hadron Collider (LHC) data, and discuss the future prospects of the LHC and the Future Circular Collider up to 100TeV. We also point out that the 2.4σ\sigma excess in the bbˉγγb\bar b\gamma\gamma final state reported by the ATLAS experiment can be interpreted as the resonance of the neutral scalar at 300GeV.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figures (v1); references added, 28 pages (v2); minor modifications, published version (v3
    corecore