529 research outputs found
Scalar Non-Luminous Matter in Galaxies
As a candidate for dark matter in galaxies, we study an SU(3) triplet of
complex scalar fields which are non-minimally coupled to gravity. In the
spherically symmetric static spacetime where the flat rotational velocity
curves of stars in galaxies can be explained, we find simple solutions of
scalar fields with SU(3) global symmetry broken to U(1) X U(1), in an
exponential scalar potential, which will be useful in a quintessence model of
the late-time acceleration of the Universe.Comment: 6 pages, no figure, LaTex. Submitted to IJMP
Is Cosmology Solved?
We have fossil evidence from the thermal background radiation that our
universe expanded from a considerably hotter denser state. We have a well
defined and testable description of the expansion, the relativistic
Friedmann-Lemaitre model. Its observational successes are impressive but I
think hardly enough for a convincing scientific case. The lists of
observational constraints and free hypotheses within the model have similar
lengths. The scorecard on the search for concordant measures of the mass
density parameter and the cosmological constant shows that the high density
Einstein-de Sitter model is challenged, but that we cannot choose between low
density models with and without a cosmological constant. That is, the
relativistic model is not strongly overconstrained, the usual test of a mature
theory. Work in progress will greatly improve the situation and may at last
yield a compelling test. If so, and the relativistic model survives, it will
close one line of research in cosmology: we will know the outlines of what
happened as our universe expanded and cooled from high density. It will not end
research: some of us will occupy ourselves with the details of how galaxies and
other large-scale structures came to be the way they are, others with the issue
of what our universe was doing before it was expanding. The former is being
driven by rapid observational advances. The latter is being driven mainly by
theory, but there are hints of observational guidance.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. To be published in PASP as part of the
proceedings of the Smithsonian debate, Is Cosmology Solved
Dynamics of a Generalized Cosmological Scalar-Tensor Theory
A generalized scalar-tensor theory is investigated whose cosmological term
depends on both a scalar field and its time derivative. A correspondence with
solutions of five-dimensional Space-Time-Matter theory is noted. Analytic
solutions are found for the scale factor, scalar field and cosmological term.
Models with free parameters of order unity are consistent with recent
observational data and could be relevant to both the dark-matter and
cosmological-"constant" problems.Comment: 13 page
Variational dynamics in open spacetimes
We study the effect of non-vanishing surface terms at spatial infinity on the
dynamics of a scalar field in an open FLRW spacetime. Starting from the
path-integral formulation of quantum field theory we argue that classical
physics is described by field configurations which extremize the action
functional in the space of field configurations for which the variation of the
action is well defined. Since these field configurations are not required to
vanish outside a bounded domain, there is generally a non-vanishing
contribution of a surface term to the variation of the action. We then
investigate whether this surface term has an effect on the dynamics of the
action-extremizing field configurations. This question appears to be
surprisingly nontrivial in the case of the open FLRW geometry, since surface
terms tend to grow as fast as volume terms in the infinite volume limit. We
find that surface terms can be important for the dynamics of the field at a
classical and at a quantum level, when there are supercurvature perturbations.Comment: 21 pages, Latex, no figure
CMB anisotropies due to cosmological magnetosonic waves
We study scalar mode perturbations (magnetosonic waves) induced by a helical
stochastic cosmological magnetic field and derive analytically the
corresponding cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and polarization
anisotropy angular power spectra. We show that the presence of a stochastic
magnetic field, or an homogeneous magnetic field, influences the acoustic
oscillation pattern of the CMB anisotropy power spectrum, effectively acting as
a reduction of the baryon fraction. We find that the scalar magnetic energy
density perturbation contribution to the CMB temperature anisotropy is small
compared to the contribution to the CMB -polarization anisotropy.Comment: 17 pages, references added, version accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Electromagnetic modes of Maxwell fisheye lens
We provide an analysis of the radial structure of TE and TM modes of the
Maxwell fisheye lens, by means of Maxwell equations as applied to the fisheye
case. Choosing a lens of size R = 1 cm, we plot some of the modes in the
infrared range.Comment: 2+6 pages in Latex, 3 figures to be found in the published referenc
Statefinder -- a new geometrical diagnostic of dark energy
We introduce a new cosmological diagnostic pair called
Statefinder. The Statefinder is dimensionless and, like the Hubble and
deceleration parameters and , is constructed from the scale factor
of the Universe and its derivatives only. The parameter forms the next
step in the hierarchy of geometrical cosmological parameters used to study the
Universe after and , while the parameter is a linear combination
of and chosen in such a way that it does not depend upon the dark
energy density . The Statefinder pair is
algebraically related to the the dark energy pressure-to-energy ratio
and its time derivative, and sheds light on the nature of dark
energy/quintessence. Its properties allow to usefully differentiate between
different forms of dark energy with constant and variable , including a
cosmological constant (). The Statefinder pair can be determined to
very good accuracy from a SNAP type experiment.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Final version to be published in JETP Lett.,
presentation shortened, references added and updated, consideration of brane
cosmological models included, conclusions unchange
Bianchi Type I Magnetofluid Cosmological Models with Variable Cosmological Constant Revisited
The behaviour of magnetic field in anisotropic Bianchi type I cosmological
model for bulk viscous distribution is investigated. The distribution consists
of an electrically neutral viscous fluid with an infinite electrical
conductivity. It is assumed that the component of shear tensor
is proportional to expansion () and the coefficient of
bulk viscosity is assumed to be a power function of mass density. Some physical
and geometrical aspects of the models are also discussed in presence and also
in absence of the magnetic field.Comment: 13 page
A conjecture on the origin of dark energy
The physical origin of holographic dark energy (HDE) is investigated. The
main existing explanations, namely the UV/IR connection argument of Cohen et
al, Thomas' bulk holography argument, and Ng's spacetime foam argument, are
shown to be not satisfactory. A new explanation of the HDE model is then
proposed based on the ideas of Thomas and Ng. It is suggested that the dark
energy might originate from the quantum fluctuations of spacetime limited by
the event horizon of the universe. Several potential problems of the
explanation are also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
Scaling solutions from interacting fluids
We examine the dynamical implications of an interaction between some of the
fluid components of the universe. We consider the combination of three matter
components, one of which is a perfect fluid and the other two are interacting.
The interaction term generalizes the cases found in scalar field cosmologies
with an exponential potential. We find that attracting scaling solutions are
obtained in several regions of parameter space, that oscillating behaviour is
possible, and that new curvature scaling solutions exist. We also discuss the
inflationary behaviour of the solutions and present some of the constraints on
the strength of the coupling, namely those arising from nucleosynthesis.Comment: RevTeX, 21 pages, 8 figure
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