1,471 research outputs found

    Inflation, dark matter and dark energy in the string landscape

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    We consider the conditions needed to unify the description of dark matter, dark energy and inflation in the context of the string landscape. We find that incomplete decay of the inflaton field gives the possibility that a single field is responsible for all three phenomena. By contrast, unifying dark matter and dark energy into a single field, separate from the inflaton, appears rather difficult.Comment: 4 pages RevTex4. Updated to include a toy model of reheating. Matches version accepted by Phys Rev Let

    Backreaction of Cosmological Perturbations in Covariant Macroscopic Gravity

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    The problem of corrections to Einstein's equations arising from averaging of inhomogeneities ("backreaction") in the cosmological context, has gained considerable attention recently. We present results of analysing cosmological perturbation theory in the framework of Zalaletdinov's fully covariant Macroscopic Gravity. We show that this framework can be adapted to the setting of cosmological perturbations in a manner which is free from gauge related ambiguities. We derive expressions for the backreaction which can be readily applied in \emph{any} situation (not necessarily restricted to the linear perturbations considered here) where the \emph{metric} can be brought to the perturbed FLRW form. In particular these expressions can be employed in toy models studying nonlinear structure formation, and possibly also in N-body simulations. Additionally, we present results of example calculations which show that the backreaction remains negligible well into the matter dominated era.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, revtex4; v2 -- typos fixed, 1 reference updated, to appear in Phys Rev

    Axino dark matter in brane world cosmology

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    We discuss dark matter in the brane world scenario. We work in the Randall-Sundrum type II brane world and assume that the lightest supersymmetric particle is the axino. We find that the axinos can play the role of cold dark matter in the universe, provided that the five-dimensional Planck mass is bounded both from below and from above. This is possible for higher reheating temperatures compared to the conventional four-dimensional cosmology due to a novel expansion law for the universe.Comment: 1+11 pages, version submitted to JCA

    Accurate determination of inflationary perturbations

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    We use a numerical code for accurate computation of the amplitude of linear density perturbations and gravitational waves generated by single-field inflation models to study the accuracy of existing analytic results based on the slow-roll approximation. We use our code to calculate the coefficient of an expansion about the exact analytic result for power-law inflation; this generates a fitting function which can be applied to all inflationary models to obtain extremely accurate results. In the appropriate limit our results confirm the Stewart--Lyth analytic second-order calculation, and we find that their results are very accurate for inflationary models favoured by current observational constraints.Comment: 9 pages LaTeX file with 3 figures incorporated, using RevTeX and eps

    Aspects of Cosmic Inflation in Expanding Bose-Einstein Condensates

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    Phonons in expanding Bose-Einstein condensates with wavelengths much larger than the healing length behave in the same way as quantum fields within a universe undergoing an accelerated expansion. This analogy facilitates the application of many tools and concepts known from general relativity (such as horizons) and the prediction of the corresponding effects such as the freezing of modes after horizon crossing and the associated amplification of quantum fluctuations. Basically the same amplification mechanism is (according to our standard model of cosmology) supposed to be responsible for the generation of the initial inhomogeneities -- and hence the seeds for the formation of structures such as our galaxy -- during cosmic inflation (i.e., a very early epoch in the evolution of our universe). After a general discussion of the analogy (\emph{analogue cosmology}), we calculate the frozen and amplified density-density fluctuations for quasi-two dimensional (Q2D) and three dimensional (3D) condensates which undergo a free expansion after switching off the (longitudinal) trap. PACS: 03.75.Kk, 04.62.+v.Comment: 17 page

    On the reliability of inflaton potential reconstruction

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    If primordial scalar and tensor perturbation spectra can be inferred from observations of the cosmic background radiation and large-scale structure, then one might hope to reconstruct a unique single-field inflaton potential capable of generating the observed spectra. In this paper we examine conditions under which such a potential can be reliably reconstructed. For it to be possible at all, the spectra must be well fit by a Taylor series expansion. A complete reconstruction requires a statistically-significant tensor mode to be measured in the microwave background. We find that the observational uncertainties dominate the theoretical error from use of the slow-roll approximation, and conclude that the reconstruction procedure will never insidiously lead to an irrelevant potential.Comment: 16 page LaTeX file with eight postscript figures embedded with epsf; no special macros neede

    Brans-Dicke Boson Stars: Configurations and Stability through Cosmic History

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    We make a detailed study of boson star configurations in Jordan--Brans--Dicke theory, studying both equilibrium properties and stability, and considering boson stars existing at different cosmic epochs. We show that boson stars can be stable at any time of cosmic history and that equilibrium stars are denser in the past. We analyze three different proposed mass functions for boson star systems, and obtain results independently of the definition adopted. We study how the configurations depend on the value of the Jordan--Brans--Dicke coupling constant, and the properties of the stars under extreme values of the gravitational asymptotic constant. This last point allows us to extract conclusions about the stability behaviour concerning the scalar field. Finally, other dynamical variables of interest, like the radius, are also calculated. In this regard, it is shown that the radius corresponding to the maximal boson star mass remains roughly the same during cosmological evolution.Comment: 9 pages RevTeX file with nine figures incorporated (uses RevTeX and epsf

    Observational Constraints on Open Inflation Models

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    We discuss observational constraints on models of open inflation. Current data from large-scale structure and the cosmic microwave background prefer models with blue spectra and/or Omega_0 >= 0.3--0.5. Models with minimal anisotropy at large angles are strongly preferred.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, with 2 postscript figures included. Second Figure correcte

    Fine tuning and the ratio of tensor to scalar density fluctuations from cosmological inflation

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    The form of the inflationary potential is severely restricted if one requires that it be natural in the technical sense, i.e. terms of unrelated origin are not required to be correlated. We determine the constraints on observables that are implied in such natural inflationary models, in particular on rr, the ratio of tensor to scalar perturbations. We find that the naturalness constraint does not require rr to be lare enough to be detectable by the forthcoming searches for B-mode polarisation in CMB maps. We show also that the value of rr is a sensitive discriminator between inflationary models.Comment: 8 pages LaTeX; clarifications and a reference added; to appear in JCA

    The Einstein static universe with torsion and the sign problem of the cosmological constant

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    In the field equations of Einstein-Cartan theory with cosmological constant a static spherically symmetric perfect fluid with spin density satisfying the Weyssenhoff restriction is considered. This serves as a rough model of space filled with (fermionic) dark matter. From this the Einstein static universe with constant torsion is constructed, generalising the Einstein Cosmos to Einstein-Cartan theory. The interplay between torsion and the cosmological constant is discussed. A possible way out of the cosmological constant's sign problem is suggested.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX; minor layout changes, typos corrected, one new equation, new reference [5], completed reference [13], two references adde
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