3,039 research outputs found
Gravitational vacuum energy in our recently accelerating universe
We review current observations of the homogeneous cosmological expansion
which, because they measure only kinematic variables, cannot determine the
dynamics driving the recent accelerated expansion. The minimal fit to the data,
the flat model, consisting of cold dark matter and a cosmological
constant, interprets geometrically as a classical spacetime
curvature constant of nature, avoiding any reference to quantum vacuum energy.
(The observed Uehling and Casimir effects measure forces due to QED vacuum
polarization, but not any quantum material vacuum energies.) An Extended
Anthropic Principle, that Dark Energy and Dark Gravity be indistinguishable,
selects out flat . Prospective cosmic shear and galaxy clustering
observations of the growth of fluctuations are intended to test whether the
'dark energy' driving the recent cosmological acceleration is static or
moderately dynamic. Even if dynamic, observational differences between an
additional negative-pressure material component within general relativity (Dark
Energy) and low-curvature modifications of general relativity (Dark Gravity)
will be extremely small.Comment: 3 pages, from Proceedings of the Casimir Workshop, to be published by
IOP in Journal of Physics Conference Serie
Comment on "The Cosmic Time in Terms of the Redshift", by Carmeli et al
The time-redshift relation of Carmeli et al. differs from that of the
standard flat LambdaCDM model by more than 500 million years for 1 < z < 4.5.Comment: 2 pages, to appear Found. Phys. Let
Neutrino mass constraint from CMB and its degeneracy with other cosmological parameters
We show that the cosmic microwave background (CMB) data of WMAP can give
subelectronvolt limit on the neutrino mass: m_nu < 0.63 eV (95% CL). We also
investigate its degeneracy with other cosmological parameters. In particular,
we show the Hubble constant derived from the WMAP data decreases considerably
when the neutrino mass is a few times 0.1 eV.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, prepared for the TAUP2007 Proceeding
A strong first order phase transition in the UMSSM
In this work, the electroweak phase transition (EWPT) strength has been
investigated within the extended Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
(UMSSM) without introducing any exotic fields. We found that the EWPT could be
strongly first order for reasonable values of the lightest Higgs and neutralino
masses.Comment: talk presented in PASCOS2010, Valencia, Spain from 19-23 Jul. 201
Searching for Oscillations in the Primordial Power Spectrum: Perturbative Approach (Paper I)
In this first of two papers, we present a new method for searching for
oscillatory features in the primordial power spectrum. A wide variety of models
predict these features in one of two different flavors: logarithmically spaced
oscillations and linearly spaced oscillations. The proposed method treats the
oscillations as perturbations on top of the scale-invariant power spectrum,
allowing us to vary all cosmological parameters. This perturbative approach
reduces the computational requirements for the search as the transfer functions
and their derivatives can be precomputed. We show that the most significant
degeneracy in the analysis is between the distance to last scattering and the
overall amplitude at low frequencies. For models with logarithmic oscillations,
this degeneracy leads to an uncertainty in the phase. For linear spaced
oscillations, it affects the frequency of the oscillations. In this first of
two papers, we test our code on simulated Planck-like data, and show we are
able to recover fiducial input oscillations with an amplitude of a few times
order 10^{-2}. We apply the code to WMAP9-year data and confirm the existence
of two intriguing resonant frequencies for log spaced oscillations. For linear
spaced oscillations we find a single resonance peak. We use numerical
simulations to assess the significance of these features and conclude that the
data do not provide compelling evidence for the existence of oscillatory
features in the primordial spectrum.Comment: 13 pages, 22 figures. Paper 1 of 2. Fixed typos, added reference
- …