2,253 research outputs found
Observer dependence of bubble nucleation and Schwinger pair production
Pair production in a constant electric field is closely analogous to bubble
nucleation in a false vacuum. The classical trajectories of the pairs are
Lorentz invariant, but it appears that this invariance should be broken by the
nucleation process. Here, we use a model detector, consisting of other
particles interacting with the pairs, to investigate how pair production is
seen by different Lorentzian observers. We focus on the idealized situation
where a constant external electric field is present for an infinitely long
time, and we consider the in-vacuum state for a charged scalar field that
describes the nucleating pairs. The in-vacuum is defined in terms of modes
which are positive frequency in the remote past. Even though the construction
uses a particular reference frame and a gauge where the vector potential is
time dependent, we show explicitly that the resulting quantum state is Lorentz
invariant. We then introduce a "detector" particle which interacts with the
nucleated pairs, and show that all Lorentzian observers will see the particles
and antiparticles nucleating preferentially at rest in the detector's rest
frame. Similar conclusions are expected to apply to bubble nucleation in a
sufficiently long lived vacuum. We also comment on certain unphysical aspects
of the Lorentz invariant in-vacuum, associated with the fact that it contains
an infinite density of particles. This can be easily remedied by considering
Lorentz breaking initial conditions.Comment: 32 papes, 1 figure, minor corrections, references added, typos
correcte
Coincident brane nucleation and the neutralization of \Lambda
Nucleation of branes by a four-form field has recently been considered in
string motivated scenarios for the neutralization of the cosmological constant.
An interesting question in this context is whether the nucleation of stacks of
coincident branes is possible, and if so, at what rate does it proceed. Feng et
al. have suggested that, at high ambient de Sitter temperature, the rate may be
strongly enhanced, due to large degeneracy factors associated with the number
of light species living on the worldsheet. This might facilitate the quick
relaxation from a large effective cosmological constant down to the observed
value. Here, we analyse this possibility in some detail. In four dimensions,
and after the moduli are stabilized, branes interact via repulsive long range
forces. Because of that, the Coleman-de Luccia (CdL) instanton for coincident
brane nucleation may not exist, unless there is some short range interaction
which keeps the branes together. If the CdL instanton exists, we find that the
degeneracy factor depends only mildly on the ambient de Sitter temperature, and
does not switch off even in the case of tunneling from flat space. This would
result in catastrophic decay of the present vacuum. If, on the contrary, the
CdL instanton does not exist, coindident brane nucleation may still proceed
through a "static" instanton, representing pair creation of critical bubbles --
a process somewhat analogous to thermal activation in flat space. In that case,
the branes may stick together due to thermal symmetry restoration, and the pair
creation rate depends exponentially on the ambient de Sitter temperature,
switching off sharply as the temperature approaches zero. Such static instanton
may be well suited for the "saltatory" relaxation scenario proposed by Feng et
al.Comment: 38 pages, 6 figures. Replaced with typos correcte
Effects of friction on cosmic strings
We study the evolution of cosmic strings taking into account the frictional
force due to the surrounding radiation. We consider small perturbations on
straight strings, oscillation of circular loops and small perturbations on
circular loops. For straight strings, friction exponentially suppresses
perturbations whose co-moving scale crosses the horizon before cosmological
time (in Planck units), where is the string tension.
Loops with size much smaller than will be approximately circular at the
time when they start the relativistic collapse. We investigate the possibility
that such loops will form black holes. We find that the number of black holes
which are formed through this process is well bellow present observational
limits, so this does not give any lower or upper bounds on . We also
consider the case of straight strings attached to walls and circular holes that
can spontaneously nucleate on metastable domain walls.Comment: 32 pages, TUTP-93-
Second Order Perturbations of a Macroscopic String; Covariant Approach
Using a world-sheet covariant formalism, we derive the equations of motion
for second order perturbations of a generic macroscopic string, thus
generalizing previous results for first order perturbations. We give the
explicit results for the first and second order perturbations of a contracting
near-circular string; these results are relevant for the understanding of the
possible outcome when a cosmic string contracts under its own tension, as
discussed in a series of papers by Vilenkin and Garriga. In particular, second
order perturbations are necessaary for a consistent computation of the energy.
We also quantize the perturbations and derive the mass-formula up to second
order in perturbations for an observer using world-sheet time . The high
frequency modes give the standard Minkowski result while, interestingly enough,
the Hamiltonian turns out to be non-diagonal in oscillators for low-frequency
modes. Using an alternative definition of the vacuum, it is possible to
diagonalize the Hamiltonian, and the standard string mass-spectrum appears for
all frequencies. We finally discuss how our results are also relevant for the
problems concerning string-spreading near a black hole horizon, as originally
discussed by Susskind.Comment: New discussion about the quantum mass-spectrum in chapter
Solutions to the cosmological constant problems
We critically review several recent approaches to solving the two
cosmological constant problems. The "old" problem is the discrepancy between
the observed value of and the large values suggested by particle
physics models. The second problem is the "time coincidence" between the epoch
of galaxy formation and the epoch of -domination t_\L. It is
conceivable that the "old" problem can be resolved by fundamental physics
alone, but we argue that in order to explain the "time coincidence" we must
account for anthropic selection effects. Our main focus here is on the
discrete- models in which can change through nucleation of
branes. We consider the cosmology of this type of models in the context of
inflation and discuss the observational constraints on the model parameters.
The issue of multiple brane nucleation raised by Feng {\it et. al.} is
discussed in some detail. We also review continuous-\L models in which the
role of the cosmological constant is played by a slowly varying potential of a
scalar field. We find that both continuous and discrete models can in principle
solve both cosmological constant problems, although the required values of the
parameters do not appear very natural. M-theory-motivated brane models, in
which the brane tension is determined by the brane coupling to the four-form
field, do not seem to be viable, except perhaps in a very tight corner of the
parameter space. Finally, we point out that the time coincidence can also be
explained in models where is fixed, but the primordial density
contrast is treated as a random variable.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures, two notes adde
Holographic multiverse and the measure problem
We discuss the duality, conjectured in earlier work, between the wave
function of the multiverse and a 3D Euclidean theory on the future boundary of
spacetime. In particular, we discuss the choice of the boundary metric and the
relation between the UV cutoff scale xi on the boundary and the hypersurfaces
Sigma on which the wave function is defined in the bulk. We propose that in the
limit of xi going to 0 these hypersurfaces should be used as cutoff surfaces in
the multiverse measure. Furthermore, we argue that in the inflating regions of
spacetime with a slowly varying Hubble rate H the hypersurfaces Sigma are
surfaces of constant comoving apparent horizon (CAH). Finally, we introduce a
measure prescription (called CAH+) which appears to have no pathological
features and coincides with the constant CAH cutoff in regions of slowly
varying H.Comment: A minor change: the discussion of unitarity on p.9 is clarifie
Bubble fluctuations in inflation
In the context of the open inflationary universe, we calculate the amplitude
of quantum fluctuations which deform the bubble shape. These give rise to
scalar field fluctuations in the open Friedman-Robertson-Walker universe which
is contained inside the bubble. One can transform to a new gauge in which
matter looks perfectly smooth, and then the perturbations behave as tensor
modes (gravitational waves of very long wavelength). For , where
is the density parameter, the microwave temperature anisotropies
produced by these modes are of order . Here, is the expansion rate during inflation, is
the intrinsic radius of the bubble at the time of nucleation, is the
bubble wall tension and labels the different multipoles (). The
gravitational backreaction of the bubble has been ignored. In this
approximation, , and the new effect can be much larger than the
one due to ordinary gravitational waves generated during inflation (unless, of
course, gets too close to one, in which case the new effect
disappears).Comment: 17 pages, 3 figs, LaTeX, epsfig.sty, available at
ftp://ftp.ifae.es/preprint/ft/uabft387.p
Living with ghosts in Lorentz invariant theories
We argue that theories with ghosts may have a long lived vacuum state even if
all interactions are Lorentz preserving. In space-time dimension D = 2, we
consider the tree level decay rate of the vacuum into ghosts and ordinary
particles mediated by non-derivative interactions, showing that this is finite
and logarithmically growing in time. For D > 2, the decay rate is divergent
unless we assume that the interaction between ordinary matter and the ghost
sector is soft in the UV, so that it can be described in terms of non-local
form factors rather than point-like vertices. We provide an example of a
nonlocal gravitational-strength interaction between the two sectors, which
appears to satisfy all observational constraints.Comment: 17 pages, comments and references adde
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