7,575 research outputs found
Dilaton Stabilization in Brane Gas Cosmology
Brane Gas Cosmology is an M-theory motivated attempt to reconcile aspects of
the standard cosmology based on Einstein's theory of general relativity.
Dilaton gravity, when incorporating winding p-brane states, has verified the
Brandenberger--Vafa mechanism --a string-motivated conjecture which explains
why only three of the nine spatial dimensions predicted by string theory grow
large. Further investigation of this mechanism has argued for a hierarchy of
subspaces, and has shown the internal directions to be stable to initial
perturbations. These results, however, are dependent on a rolling dilaton, or
varying strength of Newton's gravitational constant. In these proceedings we
show that it is not possible to stabilize the dilaton and maintain the
stability of the internal directions within the standard Brane Gas Cosmology
setup.Comment: 6 pages, no figures. To appear in the Proceedings of MRST 2004, held
at Concordia University, Montreal, QC, 12-14 May 200
Leptogenesis with Left-Right domain walls
The presence of domain walls separating regions of unbroken and
is shown to provide necessary conditions for leptogenesis which
converts later to the observed Baryon aymmetry. The strength of lepton number
violation is related to the majorana neutrino mass and hence related to current
bounds on light neutrino masses. Thus the observed neutrino masses and the
Baryon asymmetry can be used to constrain the scale of Left-Right symmetry
breaking.Comment: References added, To appear in Praman
Gravitational Field of Spherical Branes
The warped solution of Einstein's equations corresponding to the spherical
brane in five-dimensional AdS is considered. This metric represents interiors
of black holes on both sides of the brane and can provide gravitational
trapping of physical fields on the shell. It is found the analytic form of the
coordinate transformations from the Schwartschild to co-moving frame that
exists only in five dimensions. It is shown that in the static coordinates
active gravitational mass of the spherical brane, in agreement with Tolman's
formula, is negative, i.e. such objects are gravitationally repulsive.Comment: Minor corrections, 8 pages, the version accepted by Mod. Phys. Lett.
Status of Electroweak Phase Transition and Baryogenesis
I review recent progress on the electroweak phase transition and
baryogenesis, focusing on the minimal supersymmetric standard model as the
source of new physics.Comment: 10 pp, 6 figures; plenary talk given at 6th Workshop on High Energy
Physics Phenomenology, 4 Jan. 2000, Chennai, India. v.2: added reference
Testing for Features in the Primordial Power Spectrum
Well-known causality arguments show that events occurring during or at the
end of inflation, associated with reheating or preheating, could contribute a
blue component to the spectrum of primordial curvature perturbations, with the
dependence k^3. We explore the possibility that they could be observably large
in CMB, LSS, and Lyman-alpha data. We find that a k^3 component with a cutoff
at some maximum k can modestly improve the fits (Delta chi^2=2.0, 5.4) of the
low multipoles (l ~ 10 - 50) or the second peak (l ~ 540) of the CMB angular
spectrum when the three-year WMAP data are used. Moreover, the results from
WMAP are consistent with the CBI, ACBAR, 2dFGRS, and SDSS data when they are
included in the analysis. Including the SDSS galaxy clustering power spectrum,
we find weak positive evidence for the k^3 component at the level of Delta chi'
= 2.4, with the caveat that the nonlinear evolution of the power spectrum may
not be properly treated in the presence of the k^3 distortion. To investigate
the high-k regime, we use the Lyman-alpha forest data (LUQAS, Croft et al., and
SDSS Lyman-alpha); here we find evidence at the level Delta chi^2' = 3.8.
Considering that there are two additional free parameters in the model, the
above results do not give a strong evidence for features; however, they show
that surprisingly large bumps are not ruled out. We give constraints on the
ratio between the k^3 component and the nearly scale-invariant component, r_3 <
1.5, over the range of wave numbers 0.0023/Mpc < k < 8.2/Mpc. We also discuss
theoretical models which could lead to the k^3 effect, including ordinary
hybrid inflation and double D-term inflation models. We show that the
well-motivated k^3 component is also a good representative of the generic
spikelike feature in the primordial perturbation power spectrum.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures; added new section on theoretical motivation for
k^3 term, and discussion of double D-term hybrid inflation models; title
changed, added a new section discussing the generic spikelike features,
published in IJMP
Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking in General Relativity. Vector Order Parameter
Gravitational properties of a hedge-hog type topological defect in two extra
dimensions are considered in General Relativity employing a vector as the order
parameter. All previous considerations were done using the order parameter in
the form of a multiplet in a target space of scalar fields. The difference of
these two approaches is analyzed and demonstrated in detail. Regular solutions
of the Einstein equations are studied analytically and numerically. It is shown
that the existence of a negative cosmological constant is sufficient for the
spontaneous symmetry breaking of the initially plain bulk. Regular
configurations have a growing gravitational potential and are able to trap the
matter on the brane. If the energy of spontaneous symmetry breaking is high,
the gravitational potential has several points of minimum. Identical in the
uniform bulk spin-less particles, being trapped within separate minima, acquire
different masses and appear to the observer on brane as different particles
with integer spins.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
A New Source for Electroweak Baryogenesis in the MSSM
One of the most experimentally testable explanations for the origin of the
baryon asymmetry of the universe is that it was created during the electroweak
phase transition, in the minimal supersymmetric standard model. Previous
efforts have focused on the current for the difference of the two Higgsino
fields, , as the source of biasing sphalerons to create the baryon
asymmetry. We point out that the current for the orthogonal linear combination,
, is larger by several orders of magnitude. Although this increases
the efficiency of electroweak baryogenesis, we nevertheless find that large
CP-violating angles are required to get a large enough baryon
asymmetry.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; numerical error corrected, which implies that
large CP violation is needed to get observed baryon asymmetry. We improved
solution of diffusion equations, and computed more accurate values for
diffusion coefficient and damping rate
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