75 research outputs found
The N-Tachyon Assisted Inflation
In continuation of the papers hep-th/0505012 and hep-th/0508101 we
investigate the consequences when open-string tachyons roll down
simultaneously. We demonstrate that the -Tachyon system coupled to gravity
does indeed give rise to the assisted slow-roll inflation.Comment: 12 pages; v2: minor correction in eq.15 and a note added; v3: mix-up
of convention corrected in sec.3, small change in result
Multi-field Inflation with a Random Potential
Motivated by the possibility of inflation in the cosmic landscape, which may
be approximated by a complicated potential, we study the density perturbations
in multi-field inflation with a random potential. The random potential causes
the inflaton to undergo a Brownian motion with a drift in the D-dimensional
field space. To quantify such an effect, we employ a stochastic approach to
evaluate the two-point and three-point functions of primordial perturbations.
We find that in the weakly random scenario the resulting power spectrum
resembles that of the single field slow-roll case, with up to 2% more red tilt.
The strongly random scenario, leads to rich phenomenologies, such as primordial
fluctuations in the power spectrum on all angular scales. Such features may
already be hiding in the error bars of observed CMB TT (as well as TE and EE)
power spectrum and can be detected or falsified with more data coming in the
future. The tensor power spectrum itself is free of fluctuations and the tensor
to scalar ratio is enhanced. In addition a large negative running of the power
spectral index is possible. Non-Gaussianity is generically suppressed by the
growth of adiabatic perturbations on super-horizon scales, but can possibly be
enhanced by resonant effects or arise from the entropic perturbations during
the onset of (p)reheating. The formalism developed in this paper can be applied
to a wide class of multi-field inflation models including, e.g. the N-flation
scenario.Comment: More clarifications and references adde
Multi-field Inflation with a Random Potential
Motivated by the possibility of inflation in the cosmic landscape, which may
be approximated by a complicated potential, we study the density perturbations
in multi-field inflation with a random potential. The random potential causes
the inflaton to undergo a Brownian motion with a drift in the D-dimensional
field space. To quantify such an effect, we employ a stochastic approach to
evaluate the two-point and three-point functions of primordial perturbations.
We find that in the weakly random scenario the resulting power spectrum
resembles that of the single field slow-roll case, with up to 2% more red tilt.
The strongly random scenario, leads to rich phenomenologies, such as primordial
fluctuations in the power spectrum on all angular scales. Such features may
already be hiding in the error bars of observed CMB TT (as well as TE and EE)
power spectrum and can be detected or falsified with more data coming in the
future. The tensor power spectrum itself is free of fluctuations and the tensor
to scalar ratio is enhanced. In addition a large negative running of the power
spectral index is possible. Non-Gaussianity is generically suppressed by the
growth of adiabatic perturbations on super-horizon scales, but can possibly be
enhanced by resonant effects or arise from the entropic perturbations during
the onset of (p)reheating. The formalism developed in this paper can be applied
to a wide class of multi-field inflation models including, e.g. the N-flation
scenario.Comment: More clarifications and references adde
Energy Transfer between Throats from a 10d Perspective
Strongly warped regions, also known as throats, are a common feature of the
type IIB string theory landscape. If one of the throats is heated during
cosmological evolution, the energy is subsequently transferred to other throats
or to massless fields in the unwarped bulk of the Calabi-Yau orientifold. This
energy transfer proceeds either by Hawking radiation from the black hole
horizon in the heated throat or, at later times, by the decay of
throat-localized Kaluza-Klein states. In both cases, we calculate in a 10d
setup the energy transfer rate (respectively decay rate) as a function of the
AdS scales of the throats and of their relative distance. Compared to existing
results based on 5d models, we find a significant suppression of the energy
transfer rates if the size of the embedding Calabi-Yau orientifold is much
larger than the AdS radii of the throats. This effect can be partially
compensated by a small distance between the throats. These results are
relevant, e.g., for the analysis of reheating after brane inflation. Our
calculation employs the dual gauge theory picture in which each throat is
described by a strongly coupled 4d gauge theory, the degrees of freedom of
which are localized at a certain position in the compact space.Comment: 25 pages; a comment adde
Warped Reheating in Multi-Throat Brane Inflation
We investigate in some quantitative details the viability of reheating in
multi-throat brane inflationary scenarios by estimating and comparing the time
scales for the various processes involved. We also calculate within
perturbative string theory the decay rate of excited closed strings into KK
modes and compare with that of their decay into gravitons; we find that in the
inflationary throat the former is preferred. We also find that over a small but
reasonable range of parameters of the background geometry, these KK modes will
preferably tunnel to another throat (possibly containing the Standard Model)
instead of decaying to gravitons due largely to their suppressed coupling to
the bulk gravitons. Once tunneled, the same suppressed coupling to the
gravitons again allows them to reheat the Standard Model efficiently. We also
consider the effects of adding more throats to the system and find that for
extra throats with small warping, reheating still seems viable.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures, discussions on closed string decay expanded,
references adde
Kahler Moduli Inflation
We show that under general conditions there is at least one natural
inflationary direction for the Kahler moduli of type IIB flux
compactifications. This requires a Calabi-Yau which has h^{2,1}>h^{1,1}>2 and
for which the structure of the scalar potential is as in the recently found
exponentially large volume compactifications. We also need - although these
conditions may be relaxed - at least one Kahler modulus whose only
non-vanishing triple-intersection is with itself and which appears by itself in
the non-perturbative superpotential. Slow-roll inflation then occurs without a
fine tuning of parameters, evading the eta problem of F-term inflation. In
order to obtain COBE-normalised density perturbations, the stabilised volume of
the Calabi-Yau must be O(10^5-10^7) in string units, and the inflationary scale
M_{infl} ~ 10^{13} GeV. We find a robust model independent prediction for the
spectral index of 1 - 2/N_e = 0.960 - 0.967, depending on the number of
efoldings.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure; v2. references adde
Warped Supersymmetry Breaking
We address the size of supersymmetry-breaking effects within
higher-dimensional settings where the observable sector resides deep within a
strongly warped region, with supersymmetry breaking not necessarily localized
in that region. Our particular interest is in how the supersymmetry-breaking
scale seen by the observable sector depends on this warping. We obtain this
dependence in two ways: by computing within the microscopic (string) theory
supersymmetry-breaking masses in supermultiplets; and by investigating how
warping gets encoded into masses within the low-energy 4D effective theory. We
find that the lightest gravitino mode can have mass much less than the
straightforward estimate from the mass shift of the unwarped zero mode. This
lightest Kaluza-Klein excitation plays the role of the supersymmetric partner
of the graviton and has a warped mass m_{3/2} proportional to e^A, with e^A the
warp factor, and controls the size of the soft SUSY breaking terms. We
formulate the conditions required for the existence of a description in terms
of a 4D SUGRA formulation, or in terms of 4D SUGRA together with soft-breaking
terms, and describe in particular situations where neither exist for some
non-supersymmetric compactifications. We suggest that some effects of warping
are captured by a linear dependence in the Kahler potential. We outline
some implications of our results for the KKLT scenario of moduli stabilization
with broken SUSY.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figure. v2 Further discussion of dual interpretation and
gravitino mas
On Power Law Inflation in DBI Models
Inflationary models in string theory which identify the inflaton with an open
string modulus lead to effective field theories with non-canonical kinetic
terms: Dirac-Born-Infeld scalar field theories. In the case of a -brane
moving in an AdS throat with a quadratic scalar field potential DBI kinetic
terms allow a novel realization of power law inflation. This note adresses the
question of whether this behaviour is special to this particular choice of
throat geometry and potential. The answer is that for any throat geometry one
can explicitly find a potential which leads to power law inflation. This
generalizes the well known fact that an exponential potential gives power law
inflation in the case of canonical kinetic terms.Comment: References and comments adde
Warped Kaluza-Klein Dark Matter
Warped compactifications of type IIB string theory contain natural dark
matter candidates: Kaluza-Klein modes along approximate isometry directions of
long warped throats. These isometries are broken by the full compactification,
including moduli stabilization; we present a thorough survey of Kaluza-Klein
mode decay rates into light supergravity modes and Standard Model particles. We
find that these dark matter candidates typically have lifetimes longer than the
age of the universe. Interestingly, some choices for embedding the Standard
Model in the compactification lead to decay rates large enough to be observed,
so this dark matter sector may provide constraints on the parameter space of
the compactification.Comment: 37pp; v2. references, minor clarificatio
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