1,760 research outputs found
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
Equilibrium mortgage choice and housing tenure decisions with refinancing
The last decade has brought about substantial mortgage innovation and increased refinancing. The objective of this paper is to understand the determinants and implications of mortgage choice in the context of a general equilibrium model with incomplete markets. The equilibrium characterization allows us to study the impact of mortgage financing decisions in the productive economy. We show the influence of different contract characteristics such as the down payment requirement, repayment structure, and the amortization schedule for mortgage choice. We find that loan products that allow for low or no down payment or an increasing repayment schedule increase the participation of young and lower-income households. We find evidence that the volume of housing transactions increases when the payment profile is increasing and households have little housing equity. In contrast, we show that loans that allow for a rapid accumulation of home equity can still have positive participation effects without increasing the volatility of the housing market. The model predicts that the expansion of mortgage contracts and refinancing improves risk sharing opportunities for homeowners, but the magnitude varies with each contract.
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
Zero-th law in structural glasses: an example
We investigate the validity of a zeroth thermodynamic law for non-equilibrium
systems. In order to describe the thermodynamics of the glassy systems, it has
been introduced an extra parameter, the effective temperature which generalizes
the fluctuation-dissipation theorem (FDT) to off-equilibrium systems and
supposedly describes thermal fluctuations around the aging state. In particular
we analyze two coupled systems of harmonic oscillators with Monte Carlo
dynamics. We study in detail two types of dynamics: sequential dynamics, where
the coupling between the subsystems comes only from the Hamiltonian; and
parallel dynamics where there is another source of coupling: the dynamics. We
show how in the first case the effective temperatures of the two interacting
subsystems are different asymptotically due to the smallness of the thermal
conductivity in the aging regime. This explains why, in structural glasses,
different interacting degrees of freedom can stay at different effective
temperatures, and never thermalize.Comment: 10 pages. Contribution to the Proceedings of the ESF SPHINX meeting
`Glassy behaviour of kinetically constrained models' (Barcelona, March 22-25,
2001). To appear in a special issue of J. Phys. Cond. Mat
Braneworld Cosmological Perturbation Theory at Low Energy
Homogeneous cosmology in the braneworld can be studied without solving bulk
equations of motion explicitly. The reason is simply because the symmetry of
the spacetime restricts possible corrections in the 4-dimensional effective
equations of motion. It would be great if we could analyze cosmological
perturbations without solving the bulk. For this purpose, we combine the
geometrical approach and the low energy gradient expansion method to derive the
4-dimensional effective action. Given our effective action, the standard
procedure to obtain the cosmological perturbation theory can be utilized and
the temperature anisotropy of the cosmic background radiation can be computed
without solving the bulk equations of motion explicitly.Comment: 10 pages, Based on a talk presented at ACRGR4, the 4th Australasian
Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation, Monash University,
Melbourne, January 2004. To appear in the proceedings, in General Relativity
and Gravitatio
Field theory models for variable cosmological constant
Anthropic solutions to the cosmological constant problem require seemingly
unnatural scalar field potentials with a very small slope or domain walls
(branes) with a very small coupling to a four-form field. Here we introduce a
class of models in which the smallness of the corresponding parameters can be
attributed to a spontaneously broken discrete symmetry. We also demonstrate the
equivalence of scalar field and four-form models. Finally, we show how our
models can be naturally embedded into a left-right extension of the standard
model.Comment: A reference adde
Logarithmic Correction to Newton Potential in Randall-Sundrum Scenario
Using a fixed-energy amplitude in Randall-Sundrum single brane scenario, we
compute the Newton potential on the brane. It is shown that the correction
terms to the Newton potential involve a logarithmic factor. Especially, when
the distance between two point masses are very small compared to radius,
the contribution of KK spectrum becomes dominant compared to the usual
inversely square law. This fact may be used to prove the existence of an extra
dimension experimentally.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Covariant perturbations of domain walls in curved spacetime
A manifestly covariant equation is derived to describe the perturbations in a
domain wall on a given background spacetime. This generalizes recent work on
domain walls in Minkowski space and introduces a framework for examining the
stability of relativistic bubbles in curved spacetimes.Comment: 15 pages,ICN-UNAM-93-0
Gravity Waves from Instantons
We perform a first principles computation of the spectrum of gravity waves
produced in open inflationary universes. The background spacetime is taken to
be the continuation of an instanton saddle point of the Euclidean no boundary
path integral. The two-point tensor correlator is computed directly from the
path integral and is shown to be unique and well behaved in the infrared. We
discuss the tensor contribution to the cosmic microwave background anisotropy
and show how it may provide an observational discriminant between different
types of primordial instantons.Comment: 19 pages, RevTex file, including two postscript figure file
Action of Singular Instantons of Hawking-Turok Type
Using Kaluza-Klein technique we show that the singularity of Hawking-Turok
type has a fixed point (bolt) contribution to the action in addition to the
usual boundary contribution. Interestingly by adding this contribution we can
obtain a simple expression for the total action which is feasible for both
regular and singular instantons. Our result casts doubt on the constraint
proposed by Turok in the recent calculation in which Vilenkin's instantons are
regarded as a limit of certain constrained instantons.Comment: 14 pages, LaTe
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