13,306 research outputs found
Distributed SUSY Breaking: Dark Energy, Newton's Law and the LHC
We identify the underlying symmetry mechanism that suppresses the low-energy
effective 4D cosmological constant within 6D supergravity models, leading to
results suppressed by powers of the KK scale relative to the much larger masses
associated with particles localized on codimension-2 branes. In these models
the conditions for unbroken supersymmetry can be satisfied locally everywhere
within the extra dimensions, but are obstructed by global conditions like flux
quantization or the mutual inconsistency of boundary conditions at the various
branes. Consequently quantities forbidden by supersymmetry cannot be nonzero
until wavelengths of order the KK scale are integrated out, since only such
long wavelength modes see the entire space and so know that supersymmetry
breaks. We verify these arguments by extending earlier rugby-ball calculations
of one-loop vacuum energies to more general pairs of branes within two warped
extra dimensions. The predicted effective 4D vacuum energy density can be of
order C (m Mg/4 pi Mp)^4, where Mg (Mp) is the rationalized 6D (4D) Planck
scale and m is the heaviest brane-localized particle. Numerically this is C
(5.6 x 10^{-5} eV)^4 if we take m = 173 GeV and take Mg as small as possible
(10 TeV corresponding to KK size r < 1 micron), consistent with supernova
bounds. C is a constant depending on details of the bulk spectrum, which could
be ~ 500 for each of hundreds of fields. The value C ~ 6 x 10^6 gives the
observed Dark Energy density
Gravitational Forces on a Codimension-2 Brane
We compute the gravitational response of six dimensional gauged, chiral
supergravity to localized stress energy on one of two space-filling branes,
including the effects of compactifying the extra dimensions and brane
back-reaction. We find a broad class of exact solutions, including various
black-brane solutions. Several approximate solutions are also described, such
as the near-horizon geometry of a small black hole which is argued to be
approximately described by a 6D Schwarzschild (or Kerr) black hole, with event
horizon appropriately modified to encode the brane back-reaction. The general
linearized far-field solutions are found in the 4D regime very far from the
source, and all integration constants are related to physical quantities
describing the branes and the localized energy source. The localized source
determines two of these, corresponding to the source mass and the size of the
strength of a coupling to a 4D scalar mode whose mass is parametrically smaller
than the KK scale. At large distances the solutions agree with those of 4D
general relativity, but for an intermediate range of distances (larger than the
KK scale) the solutions better fit a Brans-Dicke theory. For a realistic choice
of parameters the KK scale could lie at a micron, while the crossover to
Brans-Dicke behaviour could occur at around 10 microns. While allowed by
present data this points to potentially measurable changes to Newton's Law
arising at distances larger than the KK scale.Comment: 31 pages + appendices, 2 figure
Running with Rugby Balls: Bulk Renormalization of Codimension-2 Branes
We compute how one-loop bulk effects renormalize both bulk and brane
effective interactions for geometries sourced by codimension-two branes. We do
so by explicitly integrating out spin-zero, -half and -one particles in
6-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell-Scalar theories compactified to 4 dimensions on
a flux-stabilized 2D geometry. (Our methods apply equally well for D dimensions
compactified to D-2 dimensions, although our explicit formulae do not capture
all divergences when D>6.) The renormalization of bulk interactions are
independent of the boundary conditions assumed at the brane locations, and
reproduce standard heat-kernel calculations. Boundary conditions at any
particular brane do affect how bulk loops renormalize this brane's effective
action, but not the renormalization of other distant branes. Although we
explicitly compute our loops using a rugby ball geometry, because we follow
only UV effects our results apply more generally to any geometry containing
codimension-two sources with conical singularities. Our results have a variety
of uses, including calculating the UV sensitivity of one-loop vacuum energy
seen by observers localized on the brane. We show how these one-loop effects
combine in a surprising way with bulk back-reaction to give the complete
low-energy effective cosmological constant, and comment on the relevance of
this calculation to proposed applications of codimension-two 6D models to
solutions of the hierarchy and cosmological constant problems.Comment: 42 pages + appendices. This is the final version which appears in
JHE
Fibre Inflation: Observable Gravity Waves from IIB String Compactifications
We introduce a simple string model of inflation, in which the inflaton field
can take trans-Planckian values while driving a period of slow-roll inflation.
This leads naturally to a realisation of large field inflation, inasmuch as the
inflationary epoch is well described by the single-field scalar potential . Remarkably, for a broad class of vacua
all adjustable parameters enter only through the overall coefficient , and
in particular do not enter into the slow-roll parameters. Consequently these
are determined purely by the number of \e-foldings, , and so are not
independent: . This implies similar
relations among observables like the primordial scalar-to-tensor amplitude,
, and the scalar spectral tilt, : . is
itself more model-dependent since it depends partly on the post-inflationary
reheat history. In a simple reheating scenario a reheating temperature of
GeV gives , corresponding to and , within reach of future observations. The model is
an example of a class that arises naturally in the context of type IIB string
compactifications with large-volume moduli stabilisation, and takes advantage
of the generic existence there of Kahler moduli whose dominant appearance in
the scalar potential arises from string loop corrections to the Kahler
potential. The inflaton field is a combination of Kahler moduli of a K3-fibered
Calabi-Yau manifold. We believe there are likely to be a great number of models
in this class -- `high-fibre models' -- in which the inflaton starts off far
enough up the fibre to produce observably large primordial gravity waves.Comment: Extended calculations beyond the leading approximations, including
numerical integrations of multi-field evolution; Display an example with ; Simplify the discussion of large fields; Corrected minor errors and
typos; Added references; 41 pages LaTeX, 25 figure
Accidental SUSY: Enhanced Bulk Supersymmetry from Brane Back-reaction
We compute how bulk loops renormalize both bulk and brane effective
interactions for codimension-two branes in 6D gauged chiral supergravity, as
functions of the brane tension and brane-localized flux. We do so by explicitly
integrating out hyper- and gauge-multiplets in 6D gauged chiral supergravity
compactified to 4D on a flux-stabilized 2D rugby-ball geometry, specializing
the results of a companion paper, arXiv:1210.3753, to the supersymmetric case.
While the brane back-reaction generically breaks supersymmetry, we show that
the bulk supersymmetry can be preserved if the amount of brane-localized flux
is related in a specific BPS-like way to the brane tension, and verify that the
loop corrections to the brane curvature vanish in this special case. In these
systems it is the brane-bulk couplings that fix the size of the extra
dimensions, and we show that in some circumstances the bulk geometry
dynamically adjusts to ensure the supersymmetric BPS-like condition is
automatically satisfied. We investigate the robustness of this residual
supersymmetry to loops of non-supersymmetric matter on the branes, and show
that supersymmetry-breaking effects can enter only through effective brane-bulk
interactions involving at least two derivatives. We comment on the relevance of
this calculation to proposed applications of codimension-two 6D models to
solutions of the hierarchy and cosmological constant problems.Comment: 49 pages + appendices. This is the final version to appear in JHE
Consequences of Zeeman Degeneracy for van der Waals Blockade between Rydberg Atoms
We analyze the effects of Zeeman degeneracies on the long-range interactions
between like Rydberg atoms, with particular emphasis on applications to quantum
information processing using van der Waals blockade. We present a general
analysis of how degeneracies affect the primary error sources in blockade
experiments, emphasizing that blockade errors are sensitive primarily to the
weakest possible atom-atom interactions between the degenerate states, not the
mean interaction strength. We present explicit calculations of the van der
Waals potentials in the limit where the fine-structure interaction is large
compared to the atom-atom interactions. The results are presented for all
potential angular momentum channels invoving s, p, and d states. For most
channels there are one or more combinations of Zeeman levels that have
extremely small dipole-dipole interactions and are therefore poor candidates
for effective blockade experiments. Channels with promising properties are
identified and discussed. We also present numerical calculations of Rb and Cs
dipole matrix elements and relevant energy levels using quantum defect theory,
allowing for convenient quantitative estimates of the van der Waals
interactions to be made for principal quantum numbers up to 100. Finally, we
combine the blockade and van der Waals results to quantitatively analyze the
angular distribution of the blockade shift and its consequence for angular
momentum channels and geometries of particular interest for blockade
experiments with Rb.Comment: 16 figure
Fluctuations and Pinch-Offs Observed in Viscous Fingering
Our experiments on viscous (Saffman-Taylor) fingering in Hele-Shaw channels
reveal several phenomena that were not observed in previous experiments. At low
flow rates, growing fingers undergo width fluctuations that intermittently
narrow the finger as they evolve. The magnitude of these fluctuations is
proportional to Ca^{-0.64}, where Ca is the capillary number, which is
proportional to the finger velocity. This relation holds for all aspect ratios
studied up to the onset of tip instabilities. At higher flow rates, finger
pinch-off and reconnection events are observed. These events appear to be
caused by an interaction between the actively growing finger and suppressed
fingers at the back of the channel. Both the fluctuation and pinch-off
phenomena are robust but not explained by current theory.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; to appear in Proceedings of the Seventh
Experimental Chaos Conferenc
Consolidation of complex events via reinstatement in posterior cingulate cortex
It is well-established that active rehearsal increases the efficacy of memory consolidation. It is also known that complex events are interpreted with reference to prior knowledge. However, comparatively little attention has been given to the neural underpinnings of these effects. In healthy adult humans, we investigated the impact of effortful, active rehearsal on memory for events by showing people several short video clips and then asking them to recall these clips, either aloud (Experiment 1) or silently while in an MRI scanner (Experiment 2). In both experiments, actively rehearsed clips were remembered in far greater detail than unrehearsed clips when tested a week later. In Experiment 1, highly similar descriptions of events were produced across retrieval trials, suggesting a degree of semanticization of the memories had taken place. In Experiment 2, spatial patterns of BOLD signal in medial temporal and posterior midline regions were correlated when encoding and rehearsing the same video. Moreover, the strength of this correlation in the posterior cingulate predicted the amount of information subsequently recalled. This is likely to reflect a strengthening of the representation of the video's content. We argue that these representations combine both new episodic information and stored semantic knowledge (or "schemas"). We therefore suggest that posterior midline structures aid consolidation by reinstating and strengthening the associations between episodic details and more generic schematic information. This leads to the creation of coherent memory representations of lifelike, complex events that are resistant to forgetting, but somewhat inflexible and semantic-like in nature
Axionic D3-D7 Inflation
We study the motion of a D3 brane moving within a Type IIB string vacuum
compactified to 4D on K3 x T_2/Z_2 in the presence of D7 and O7 planes. We work
within the effective 4D supergravity describing how the mobile D3 interacts
with the lightest bulk moduli of the compactification, including the effects of
modulus-stabilizing fluxes. We seek inflationary solutions to the resulting
equations, performing our search numerically in order to avoid resorting to
approximate parameterizations of the low-energy potential. We consider
uplifting from D-terms and from the supersymmetry-breaking effects of anti-D3
branes. We find examples of slow-roll inflation (with anti-brane uplifting)
with the mobile D3 moving along the toroidal directions, falling towards a
D7-O7 stack starting from the antipodal point. The inflaton turns out to be a
linear combination of the brane position and the axionic partner of the K3
volume modulus, and the similarity of the potential along the inflaton
direction with that of racetrack inflation leads to the prediction n_s \le 0.95
for the spectral index. The slow roll is insensitive to most of the features of
the effective superpotential, and requires a one-in-10^4 tuning to ensure that
the torus is close to square in shape. We also consider D-term inflation with
the D3 close to the attractive D7, but find that for a broad (but not
exhaustive) class of parameters the conditions for slow roll tend to
destabilize the bulk moduli. In contrast to the axionic case, the best
inflationary example of this kind requires the delicate adjustment of potential
parameters (much more than the part-per-mille level), and gives inflation only
at an inflection point of the potential (and so suffers from additional
fine-tuning of initial conditions to avoid an overshoot problem).Comment: 29 pages, 5 figure
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