9,929 research outputs found
Dark Energy and the Hubble Age
I point out that an effective upper limit of approximately 20 Gyr (for a
Hubble constant of 72 km/s/Mpc) or alternatively on the -independent
quantity , exists on the age of the Universe, essentially
independent of the unknown equation of state of the dominant dark energy
component in the Universe. Unless astrophysical constraints on the age of the
Universe can convincingly reduce the upper limit to below this value no useful
lower limit on the equation of state parameter for this component can be
obtained. Direct dating by stars does not provide a useful constraint, but
model-dependent cosmological limits from supernovae and the CMB observations
may. For a constant value of , a bound Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Ap. J. Lett (analytic asymptotic upper bound
now added
Geometry and Destiny
The recognition that the cosmological constant may be non-zero forces us to
re-evaluate standard notions about the connection between geometry and the fate
of our Universe. An open Universe can recollapse, and a closed Universe can
expand forever. As a corollary, we point out that there is no set of
cosmological observations we can perform that will unambiguously allow us to
determine what the ultimate destiny of the Universe will be.Comment: 7 pages, Gravity Research Foundation Essa
Old Galaxies at High Redshift and the Cosmological Constant
In a recent striking discovery, Dunlop {\bf \it et al} observed a galaxy at
redshift z=1.55 with an estimated age of 3.5 Gyr. This is incompatible with age
estimates for a flat matter dominated universe unless the Hubble constant is
less than . While both an open universe, and a universe
with a cosmological constant alleviate this problem, I argue here that this
result favors a non-zero cosmological constant, especially when considered in
light of other cosmological constraints. In the first place, for the favored
range of matter densities, this constraint is more stringent than the globular
cluster age constraint, which already favors a non-zero cosmological constant.
Moreover, the age-redshift relation for redshifts of order unity implies that
the ratio between the age associated with redshift 1.55 and the present age is
also generally larger for a cosmological constant dominated universe than for
an open universe. In addition, structure formation is generally suppressed in
low density cosmologies, arguing against early galaxy formation. The additional
constraints imposed by the new observation on the parameter space of vs
(where ) are derived for both
cosmologies. For a cosmological constant dominated universe this constraint is
consistent with the range allowed by other cosmological constraints, which also
favor a non-zero value.Comment: latex, 10 pages, including two embedded postscript figure
Observation of Cosmic Acceleration and Determining the Fate of the Universe
Current observations of Type Ia supernovae provide evidence for cosmic
acceleration out to a redshift of z \lsim 1, leading to the possibility that
the universe is entering an inflationary epoch. However, inflation can take
place only if vacuum-energy (or other sufficiently slowly redshifting source of
energy density) dominates the energy density of a region of physical radius
1/H. We argue that for the best-fit values of and
inferred from the supernovae data, one must confirm cosmic acceleration out to
at least to infer that the universe is inflating.Comment: 4 pages;important changes in conclusion; published in Phys. Rev. Let
Reheating predictions in single field inflation
Reheating is a transition era after the end of inflation, during which the
inflaton is converted into the particles that populate the Universe at later
times. No direct cosmological observables are normally traceable to this period
of reheating. Indirect bounds can however be derived. One possibility is to
consider cosmological evolution for observable CMB scales from the time of
Hubble crossing to the present time. Depending upon the model, the duration and
final temperature after reheating, as well as its equation of state, may be
directly linked to inflationary observables. For single-field inflationary
models, if we approximate reheating by a constant equation of state, one can
derive relations between the reheating duration (or final temperature), its
equation of state parameter, and the scalar power spectrum amplitude and
spectral index. While this is a simple approximation, by restricting the
equation of state to lie within a broad physically allowed range, one can in
turn bracket an allowed range of and for these models. The added
constraints can help break degeneracies between inflation models that otherwise
overlap in their predictions for and .Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures. Revised in response to comments on the original
version, and in preparation for submission for publication. More references
and a new figure were adde
Lepton flavor violation in low-scale seesaw models: SUSY and non-SUSY contributions
Taking the supersymmetric inverse seesaw mechanism as the explanation for
neutrino oscillation data, we investigate charged lepton flavor violation in
radiative and 3-body lepton decays as well as in neutrinoless
conversion in muonic atoms. In contrast to former studies, we take into account
all possible contributions: supersymmetric as well as non-supersymmetric. We
take CMSSM-like boundary conditions for the soft supersymmetry breaking
parameters. We find several regions where cancellations between various
contributions exist, reducing the lepton flavor violating rates by an order of
magnitude compared to the case where only the dominant contribution is taken
into account. This is in particular important for the correct interpretation of
existing data as well as for estimating the reach of near future experiments
where the sensitivity will be improved by one to two orders of magnitude.
Moreover, we demonstrate that ratios like BR()/BR() can be used to determine whether the supersymmetric contributions
dominate over the and contributions or vice versa.Comment: 75 pages, 7 figures. v3: references and comments added. Matches
published versio
Lifetime statistics of quantum chaos studied by a multiscale analysis
In a series of pump and probe experiments, we study the lifetime statistics
of a quantum chaotic resonator when the number of open channels is greater than
one. Our design embeds a stadium billiard into a two dimensional photonic
crystal realized on a Silicon-on-insulator substrate. We calculate resonances
through a multiscale procedure that combines graph theory, energy landscape
analysis and wavelet transforms. Experimental data is found to follow the
universal predictions arising from random matrix theory with an excellent level
of agreement.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Cloud-top meridional momentum transports on Saturn and Jupiter
Cloud-tracked wind measurements reported by Sromovsky et al. were analyzed to determine meridional momentum transports in Saturn's northern middle latitudes. Results are expressed in terms of eastward and northward velocity components (u and v), and eddy components u and v. At most latitudes between 13 and 44 deg N (planetocentric), the transport by the mean flow () is measurably southward, tending to support Saturn's large equatorial jet, and completely dominating the eddy transport. Meridional velocities are near zero at the peak of the relatively weak westward jet; along the flanks of that jet, measurements indicate divergent flow out of the jet. In this region the dominant eddy transport () is northward on the north side of the jet, but not resolvable on the south side. Eddy transports at most other latitudes are not significantly different from measurement error. The conversion of eddy kinetic energy to mean kinetic energy, indicated by the correlation between and d/dy (where y is meridional distance) is clearly smaller than various values reported for Jupiter, and not significantly different from zero. Both Jovian and Saturnian results may be biased by the tendency for cloud tracking to favor high contrast features, and thus may not be entirely representative of the cloud level motions as a whole
A Nearly Scale Invariant Spectrum of Gravitational Radiation from Global Phase Transitions
Using a large N sigma model approximation we explicitly calculate the power
spectrum of gravitational waves arising from a global phase transition in the
early universe and we confirm that it is scale invariant, implying an
observation of such a spectrum may not be a unique feature of inflation.
Moreover, the predicted amplitude can be over 3 orders of magnitude larger than
the naive dimensional estimate, implying that even a transition that occurs
after inflation may dominate in Cosmic Microwave Background polarization or
other gravity wave signals.Comment: 4 pages, PRL published versio
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