707 research outputs found
Relaxing the Cosmological Moduli Problem
Typically the moduli fields acquire mass m =C H in the early universe, which
shifts the position of the minimum of their effective potential and leads to an
excessively large energy density of the oscillating moduli fields at the later
stages of the evolution of the universe. This constitutes the cosmological
moduli problem, or Polonyi field problem. We show that the cosmological moduli
problem can be solved or at least significantly relaxed in the theories in
which C >> 1, as well as in some models with C << 1.Comment: 9 pages, 3 Postscript figure
On the Numerical Evaluation of One-Loop Amplitudes: the Gluonic Case
We develop an algorithm of polynomial complexity for evaluating one-loop
amplitudes with an arbitrary number of external particles. The algorithm is
implemented in the Rocket program. Starting from particle vertices given by
Feynman rules, tree amplitudes are constructed using recursive relations. The
tree amplitudes are then used to build one-loop amplitudes using an integer
dimension on-shell cut method. As a first application we considered only three
and four gluon vertices calculating the pure gluonic one-loop amplitudes for
arbitrary external helicity or polarization states. We compare our numerical
results to analytical results in the literature, analyze the time behavior of
the algorithm and the accuracy of the results, and give explicit results for
fixed phase space points for up to twenty external gluons.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures; v2: references added, version accepted for
publicatio
Physics in the Real Universe: Time and Spacetime
The Block Universe idea, representing spacetime as a fixed whole, suggests
the flow of time is an illusion: the entire universe just is, with no special
meaning attached to the present time. This view is however based on
time-reversible microphysical laws and does not represent macro-physical
behaviour and the development of emergent complex systems, including life,
which do indeed exist in the real universe. When these are taken into account,
the unchanging block universe view of spacetime is best replaced by an evolving
block universe which extends as time evolves, with the potential of the future
continually becoming the certainty of the past. However this time evolution is
not related to any preferred surfaces in spacetime; rather it is associated
with the evolution of proper time along families of world linesComment: 28 pages, including 9 Figures. Major revision in response to referee
comment
CutTools: a program implementing the OPP reduction method to compute one-loop amplitudes
We present a program that implements the OPP reduction method to extract the
coefficients of the one-loop scalar integrals from a user defined
(sub)-amplitude or Feynman Diagram, as well as the rational terms coming from
the 4-dimensional part of the numerator. The rational pieces coming from the
epsilon-dimensional part of the numerator are treated as an external input, and
can be computed with the help of dedicated tree-level like Feynman rules.
Possible numerical instabilities are dealt with the help of arbitrary
precision routines, that activate only when needed.Comment: Version published in JHE
Is nonperturbative inflatino production during preheating a real threat to cosmology?
We discuss toy models where supersymmetry is broken due to non-vanishing
time-varying vacuum expectation value of the inflaton field during preheating.
We discuss the production of inflatino the superpartner of inflaton due to
vacuum fluctuations and then we argue that they do not survive until
nucleosynthesis and decay along with the inflaton to produce a thermal bath
after preheating. Thus the only relevant remnant is the helicity \pm 3/2
gravitinos which can genuinely cause problem to nucleosynthesis.Comment: 10 pages, Updates to match the accepted version in Phys. Rev.
On the reheating stage after inflation
We point out that inflaton decay products acquire plasma masses during the
reheating phase following inflation. The plasma masses may render inflaton
decay kinematicaly forbidden, causing the temperature to remain frozen for a
period at a plateau value. We show that the final reheating temperature may be
uniquely determined by the inflaton mass, and may not depend on its coupling.
Our findings have important implications for the thermal production of
dangerous relics during reheating (e.g., gravitinos), for extracting bounds on
particle physics models of inflation from Cosmic Microwave Background
anisotropy data, for the production of massive dark matter candidates during
reheating, and for models of baryogenesis or leptogensis where massive
particles are produced during reheating.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Submitted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Stochastic background of gravitational waves
A continuous stochastic background of gravitational waves (GWs) for burst
sources is produced if the mean time interval between the occurrence of bursts
is smaller than the average time duration of a single burst at the emission,
i.e., the so called duty cycle must be greater than one. To evaluate the
background of GWs produced by an ensemble of sources, during their formation,
for example, one needs to know the average energy flux emitted during the
formation of a single object and the formation rate of such objects as well. In
many cases the energy flux emitted during an event of production of GWs is not
known in detail, only characteristic values for the dimensionless amplitude and
frequencies are known. Here we present a shortcut to calculate stochastic
backgrounds of GWs produced from cosmological sources. For this approach it is
not necessary to know in detail the energy flux emitted at each frequency.
Knowing the characteristic values for the ``lumped'' dimensionless amplitude
and frequency we show that it is possible to calculate the stochastic
background of GWs produced by an ensemble of sources.Comment: 6 pages, 4 eps figures, (Revtex) Latex. Physical Review D (in press
On Traversable Lorentzian Wormholes in the Vacuum Low Energy Effective String Theory in Einstein and Jordan Frames
Three new classes (II-IV) of solutions of the vacuum low energy effective
string theory in four dimensions are derived. Wormhole solutions are
investigated in those solutions including the class I case both in the Einstein
and in the Jordan (string) frame. It turns out that, of the eight classes of
solutions investigated (four in the Einstein frame and four in the
corresponding string frame), massive Lorentzian traversable wormholes exist in
five classes. Nontrivial massless limit exists only in class I Einstein frame
solution while none at all exists in the string frame. An investigation of test
scalar charge motion in the class I solution in the two frames is carried out
by using the Plebanski-Sawicki theorem. A curious consequence is that the
motion around the extremal zero (Keplerian) mass configuration leads, as a
result of scalar-scalar interaction, to a new hypothetical "mass" that confines
test scalar charges in bound orbits, but does not interact with neutral test
particles.Comment: 18 page
Large Deviations for Random Trees
We consider large random trees under Gibbs distributions and prove a Large
Deviation Principle (LDP) for the distribution of degrees of vertices of the
tree. The LDP rate function is given explicitly. An immediate consequence is a
Law of Large Numbers for the distribution of vertex degrees in a large random
tree. Our motivation for this study comes from the analysis of RNA secondary
structures.Comment: 10 page
Archaeological Landscapes during the 10â8 ka Lake Stanley Lowstand on the AlpenaâAmberley Ridge, Lake Huron
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136243/1/gea21590.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136243/2/gea21590_am.pd
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