4,357 research outputs found
Kelvin Probe Spectroscopy of a Two-Dimensional Electron Gas Below 300 mK
A scanning force microscope with a base temperature below 300 mK is used for
measuring the local electron density of a two-dimensional electron gas embedded
in an Ga[Al]As heterostructure. At different separations between AFM tip and
sample, a dc-voltage is applied between the tip and the electron gas while
simultaneously recording the frequency shift of the oscillating tip. Using a
plate capacitor model the local electron density can be extracted from the
data. The result coincides within 10% with the data obtained from transport
measurements.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Experimental archeology and serious games: challenges of inhabiting virtual heritage
Experimental archaeology has long yielded valuable insights into the tools and techniques that featured in past peoplesâ relationship with the material world around them. However, experimental archaeology has, hitherto, confined itself to rigid, empirical and quantitative questions. This paper applies principles of experimental archaeology and serious gaming tools in the reconstructions of a British Iron Age Roundhouse. The paper explains a number of experiments conducted to look for quantitative differences in movement in virtual vs material environments using both âvirtualâ studio reconstruction as well as material reconstruction. The data from these experiments was then analysed to look for differences in movement which could be attributed to artefacts and/or environments. The paper explains the structure of the experiments, how the data was generated, what theories may make sense of the data, what conclusions have been drawn and how serious gaming tools can support the creation of new experimental heritage environments
wormholes and topological charge
I investigate solutions to the Euclidean Einstein-matter field equations with
topology in a theory with a massless periodic scalar
field and electromagnetism. These solutions carry winding number of the
periodic scalar as well as magnetic flux. They induce violations of a
quasi-topological conservation law which conserves the product of magnetic flux
and winding number on the background spacetime. I extend these solutions to a
model with stable loops of superconducting cosmic string, and interpret them as
contributing to the decay of such loops.Comment: 18 pages (includes 6 figs.), harvmac and epsf, CU-TP-62
Generalized Assisted Inflation
We obtain a new class of exact cosmological solutions for multi-scalar fields
with exponential potentials. We generalize the assisted inflation solutions
previously obtained, and demonstrate how they are modified when there exist
cross-couplings between the fields, such as occur in supergravity inspired
cosmological models.Comment: 5 page
Correspondence between Loop-inspired and Braneworld Cosmology
Braneworld scenarios are motivated by string/M-theory and can be
characterized by the way in which they modify the conventional Friedmann
equations of Einstein gravity. An alternative approach to quantum gravity,
however, is the loop quantum cosmology program. In the semi-classical limit,
the cosmic dynamics in this scenario can also be described by a set of modified
Friedmann equations. We demonstrate that a dynamical correspondence can be
established between these two paradigms at the level of the effective field
equations. This allows qualitatively similar features between the two
approaches to be compared and contrasted as well as providing a framework for
viewing braneworld scenarios in terms of constrained Hamiltonian systems. As
concrete examples of this correspondence, we illustrate the relationships
between different cosmological backgrounds representing scaling solutions
Primordial black holes from cosmic necklaces
Cosmic necklaces are hybrid topological defects consisting of monopoles and
strings. We argue that primordial black holes(PBHs) may have formed from loops
of the necklaces, if there exist stable winding states, such as coils and
cycloops. Unlike the standard scenario of PBH formation from string loops, in
which the kinetic energy plays important role when strings collapse into black
holes, the PBH formation may occur in our scenario after necklaces have
dissipated their kinetic energy. Then, the significant difference appears in
the production ratio. In the standard scenario, the production ratio
becomes a tiny fraction , however it becomes in our
case. On the other hand, the typical mass of the PBHs is much smaller than the
standard scenario, if they are produced in the same epoch. As the two
mechanisms may work at the same time, the necklaces may have more than one
channel of the gravitational collapse. Although the result obtained in this
paper depends on the evolution of the dimensionless parameter , the
existence of the winding state could be a serious problem in some cases. Since
the existence of the winding state in brane models is due to the existence of a
non-tivial circle in the compactified space, the PBH formation can be used to
probe the structure of the compactified space. Black holes produced by this
mechanism may have peculiar properties.Comment: 22pages, 3 figures, added many comments, +1 figure, accepted for
publication in JHE
Curvaton reheating: an application to braneworld inflation
The curvaton was introduced recently as a distinct inflationary mechanism for
generating adiabatic density perturbations. Implicit in that scenario is that
the curvaton offers a new mechanism for reheating after inflation, as it is a
form of energy density not diluted by the inflationary expansion. We consider
curvaton reheating in the context of a braneworld inflation model, {\em steep
inflation}, which features a novel use of the braneworld to give a new
mechanism for ending inflation. The original steep inflation model featured
reheating by gravitational particle production, but the inefficiency of that
process brings observational difficulties. We demonstrate here that the
phenomenology of steep inflation is much improved by curvaton reheating.Comment: 8 pages RevTeX4 file with two figures incorporated. Improved
referencing, matches PRD accepted versio
Slow-roll corrections to inflaton fluctuations on a brane
Quantum fluctuations of an inflaton field, slow-rolling during inflation are
coupled to metric fluctuations. In conventional four dimensional cosmology one
can calculate the effect of scalar metric perturbations as slow-roll
corrections to the evolution of a massless free field in de Sitter spacetime.
This gives the well-known first-order corrections to the field perturbations
after horizon-exit. If inflaton fluctuations on a four dimensional brane
embedded in a five dimensional bulk spacetime are studied to first-order in
slow-roll then we recover the usual conserved curvature perturbation on
super-horizon scales. But on small scales, at high energies, we find that the
coupling to the bulk metric perturbations cannot be neglected, leading to a
modified amplitude of vacuum oscillations on small scales. This is a large
effect which casts doubt on the reliability of the usual calculation of
inflaton fluctuations on the brane neglecting their gravitational coupling.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Slow-roll corrections to inflaton fluctuations on a brane
Quantum fluctuations of an inflaton field, slow-rolling during inflation are
coupled to metric fluctuations. In conventional four dimensional cosmology one
can calculate the effect of scalar metric perturbations as slow-roll
corrections to the evolution of a massless free field in de Sitter spacetime.
This gives the well-known first-order corrections to the field perturbations
after horizon-exit. If inflaton fluctuations on a four dimensional brane
embedded in a five dimensional bulk spacetime are studied to first-order in
slow-roll then we recover the usual conserved curvature perturbation on
super-horizon scales. But on small scales, at high energies, we find that the
coupling to the bulk metric perturbations cannot be neglected, leading to a
modified amplitude of vacuum oscillations on small scales. This is a large
effect which casts doubt on the reliability of the usual calculation of
inflaton fluctuations on the brane neglecting their gravitational coupling.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Collisions of Cosmic F- and D-strings
Recent work suggests that fundamental and Dirichlet strings, and their (p,q)
bound states, may be observed as cosmic strings. The evolution of cosmic string
networks, and therefore their observational signals, depends on what happens
when two strings collide. We study this in string perturbation theory for
collisions between all possible pairs of strings; different cases involve
sphere, disk, and annulus amplitudes. The result also depends on the details of
compactification; the dependence on ratios of scales is only logarithmic, but
this is still numerically important. We study a range of models and parameters,
and find that in most cases these strings can be distinguished from cosmic
strings that arise as gauge theory solitons.Comment: 42 pages, 7 figures; v.2: added references, expanded discussion of
reconnection in field theor
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