82 research outputs found
Gravitational waves in preheating
We study the evolution of gravitational waves through the preheating era that
follows inflation. The oscillating inflaton drives parametric resonant growth
of scalar field fluctuations, and although super-Hubble tensor modes are not
strongly amplified, they do carry an imprint of preheating. This is clearly
seen in the Weyl tensor, which provides a covariant description of
gravitational waves.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Revte
Are braneworlds born isotropic?
It has recently been suggested that an isotropic singularity may be a generic
feature of brane cosmologies, even in the inhomogeneous case. Using the
covariant and gauge-invariant approach we present a detailed analysis of linear
perturbations of the isotropic model which is a past attractor in
the phase space of homogeneous Bianchi models on the brane. We find that for
matter with an equation of state parameter , the dimensionless
variables representing generic anisotropic and inhomogeneous perturbations
decay as , showing that the model is asymptotically stable
in the past. We conclude that brane universes are born with isotropy naturally
built-in, contrary to standard cosmology. The observed large-scale homogeneity
and isotropy of the universe can therefore be explained as a consequence of the
initial conditions if the brane-world paradigm represents a description of the
very early universe.Comment: Changed to match published versio
Cosmic magnetic fields from velocity perturbations in the early Universe
We show, using a covariant and gauge-invariant charged multifluid
perturbation scheme, that velocity perturbations of the matter-dominated dust
Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) model can lead to the generation of
cosmic magnetic fields. Moreover, using cosmic microwave background (CMB)
constraints, it is argued that these fields can reach strengths of between
10^{-28} and 10^{-29} G at the time the dynamo mechanism sets in, making them
plausible seed field candidates.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, IOP style, minor changes and typos correcte
Frame dragging, vorticity and electromagnetic fields in axially symmetric stationary spacetimes
We present a general study about the relation between the vorticity tensor
and the Poynting vector of the electromagnetic field for axially symmetric
stationary electrovacuum metrics. The obtained expressions allow to understand
the role of the Poynting vector in the dragging of inertial frames. The
particular case of the rotating massive charged magnetic dipole is analyzed in
detail. In addition, the electric and magnetic parts of the Weyl tensor are
calculated and the link between the later and the vorticity is established.
Then we show that, in the vacuum case, the necessary and sufficient condition
for the vanishing of the magnetic part is that the spacetime be static.Comment: 16 pages Latex. Some minor changes in the text and typos correcte
Bounce behaviour in Kantowski-Sachs and Bianchi Cosmologies
Many cosmological scenarios envisage either a bounce of the universe at early
times, or collapse of matter locally to form a black hole which re-expands into
a new expanding universe region. Energy conditions preclude this happening for
ordinary matter in general relativistic universes, but scalar or dilatonic
fields can violate some of these conditions, and so could possibly provide
bounce behaviour. In this paper we show that such bounces cannot occur in
Kantowski-Sachs models without violating the {\it reality condition}
. This also holds true for other isotropic spatially
homogenous Bianchi models, with the exception of closed
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker and Bianchi IX models; bounce behaviour violates the
{\em weak energy condition} and . We turn to the
Randall-Sundrum type braneworld scenario for a possible resolution of this
problem.Comment: Matches published versio
Cosmological dynamics of R^n gravity
A detailed analysis of dynamics of cosmological models based on
gravity is presented. We show that the cosmological equations can be written as
a first order autonomous system and analyzed using the standard techniques of
dynamical system theory. In absence of perfect fluid matter, we find exact
solutions whose behavior and stability are analyzed in terms of the values of
the parameter . When matter is introduced, the nature of the (non-minimal)
coupling between matter and higher order gravity induces restrictions on the
allowed values of . Selecting such intervals of values and following the
same procedure used in the vacuum case, we present exact solutions and analyze
their stability for a generic value of the parameter . From this analysis
emerges the result that for a large set of initial conditions an accelerated
expansion is an attractor for the evolution of the cosmology. When matter
is present a transient almost-Friedman phase can also be present before the
transition to an accelerated expansion.Comment: revised and extended version, 35 pages, 12 tables, 14 figures which
are not included and can be found at http://www.mth.uct.ac.za/~peter/R
On the Stability of the Einstein Static Universe
We show using covariant techniques that the Einstein static universe
containing a perfect fluid is always neutrally stable against small
inhomogeneous vector and tensor perturbations and neutrally stable against
adiabatic scalar density inhomogeneities so long as c_{s}^2>1/5, and unstable
otherwise. We also show that the stability is not significantly changed by the
presence of a self-interacting scalar field source, but we find that spatially
homogeneous Bianchi type IX modes destabilise an Einstein static universe. The
implications of these results for the initial state of the universe and its
pre-inflationary evolution are also discussed.Comment: some additional comments and references; version to appear in Class.
Quant. Gra
Density growth in Kantowski-Sachs cosmologies with cosmological constant
In this work the growth of density perturbations in Kantowski-Sachs
cosmologies with a positive cosmological constant is studied, using the 1+3 and
1+1+2 covariant formalisms. For each wave number we obtain a closed system for
scalars formed from quantities that are zero on the background and hence are
gauge-invariant. The solutions to this system are then analyzed both
analytically and numerically. In particular the effects of anisotropy and the
behaviour close to a bounce in the cosmic scale factor are considered. We find
that typically the density gradient in the bouncing directions experiences a
local maximum at or slightly after the bounce.Comment: 33 pages, 17 picture
Gravito-electromagnetism
We develop and apply a fully covariant 1+3 electromagnetic analogy for
gravity. The free gravitational field is covariantly characterized by the Weyl
gravito-electric and gravito-magnetic spatial tensor fields, whose dynamical
equations are the Bianchi identities. Using a covariant generalization of
spatial vector algebra and calculus to spatial tensor fields, we exhibit the
covariant analogy between the tensor Bianchi equations and the vector Maxwell
equations. We identify gravitational source terms, couplings and potentials
with and without electromagnetic analogues. The nonlinear vacuum Bianchi
equations are shown to be invariant under covariant spatial duality rotation of
the gravito-electric and gravito-magnetic tensor fields. We construct the
super-energy density and super-Poynting vector of the gravitational field as
natural U(1) group invariants, and derive their super-energy conservation
equation. A covariant approach to gravito-electric/magnetic monopoles is also
presented.Comment: 14 pages. Version to appear in Class. Quant. Gra
Charged multifluids in general relativity
The exact 1+3 covariant dynamical fluid equations for a multi-component
plasma, together with Maxwell's equations are presented in such a way as to
make them suitable for a gauge-invariant analysis of linear density and
velocity perturbations of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker model. In the case
where the matter is described by a two component plasma where thermal effects
are neglected, a mode representing high-frequency plasma oscillations is found
in addition to the standard growing and decaying gravitational instability
picture. Further applications of these equations are also discussed.Comment: 14 pages (example added), to appear in Class. Quantum Gra
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