1,629 research outputs found
Instability of the one-texture universe
The one-texture universe, introduced by Davis in 1987, is a homogeneous mapping of a scalar field with an S^3 vacuum into a closed universe. It has long been known to mathematicians that such solutions, although static, are unstable. We show by explicit construction that there are four degenerate lowest modes which are unstable, corresponding to collapse of the texture towards a single point, in the case where gravitational back reaction is neglected. We discuss the instability time scale in both static and expanding space-times; in the latter case it is of order of the present age of the universe, suggesting that, though unstable, the one-texture universe could survive to the present. The cosmic microwave background constrains the initial magnitude of this unstable perturbation to be less than âŒ10^-3
Where are the Hedgehogs in Nematics?
In experiments which take a liquid crystal rapidly from the isotropic to the
nematic phase, a dense tangle of defects is formed. In nematics, there are in
principle both line and point defects (``hedgehogs''), but no point defects are
observed until the defect network has coarsened appreciably. In this letter the
expected density of point defects is shown to be extremely low, approximately
per initially correlated domain, as result of the topology
(specifically, the homology) of the order parameter space.Comment: 6 pages, latex, 1 figure (self-unpacking PostScript)
Correlations in Cosmic String Networks
We investigate scaling and correlations of the energy and momentum in an
evolving network of cosmic strings in Minkowski space. These quantities are of
great interest, as they must be understood before accurate predictions for the
power spectra of the perturbations in the matter and radiation in the early
Universe can be made. We argue that Minkowski space provides a reasonable
approximation to a Friedmann background for string dynamics and we use our
results to construct a simple model of the network, in which it is considered
to consist of randomly placed segments moving with random velocities. This
model works well in accounting for features of the two-time correlation
functions, and even better for the power spectra.Comment: 20pp Plain LaTeX, 11 EPS figures, uses epsf.st
Smooth metrics for snapping strings
We construct two possible metrics for abelian Higgs vortices with ends on black holes. We show how the detail of the vortex fields smooths out the nodal singularities which exist in the idealized metrics. A corollary is that apparently topologically stable strings might be able to split by black hole pair production. We estimate the rate per unit length by reference to related Ernst and C-metric instantons, concluding that it is completely negligible for GUT-scale strings. The estimated rate for macroscopic superstrings is much higher, although still extremely small, unless there is an early phase of strong coupling
Detecting and distinguishing topological defects in future data from the CMBPol satellite
The proposed CMBPol mission will be able to detect the imprint of topological defects on the CMB provided the contribution is sufficiently strong. We quantify the detection threshold for cosmic strings and for textures, and analyze the satellite's ability to distinguish between these different types of defects. We also assess the level of danger of misidentification of a defect signature as from the wrong defect type or as an effect of primordial gravitational waves. A 0.002 fractional contribution of cosmic strings to the CMB temperature spectrum at multipole ten, and similarly a 0.001 fractional contribution of textures, can be detected and correctly identified at the 3 level. We also confirm that a tensor contribution of r=0.0018 can be detected at over 3, in agreement with the CMBPol mission concept study. These results are supported by a model selection analysis
Strictly Anomaly Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking
We consider an MSSM extension with anomaly mediation as the source of
supersymmetry-breaking, and a U(1) symmetry which solves the tachyonic slepton
problem, and introduces both the see-saw mechanism for neutrino masses, and the
Higgs mu-term. We compare its spectra with those from so-called minimal anomaly
mediated supersymmetry breaking. We find a Standard Model-like Higgs of mass
125 GeV with a gravitino mass of 140 TeV and tan(beta)=16. However, the muon
anomalous magnetic moment is 3 sigma away from the experimental value.
The model naturally produces a period of hybrid inflation, which can exit to
a false vacuum characterised by large Higgs vevs, reaching the true ground
state after a period of thermal inflation. The scalar spectral index is reduced
to approximately 0.975, and the correct abundance of neutralino dark matter can
be produced by decays of thermally-produced gravitinos, provided the gravitino
mass (and hence the Higgs mass) is high. Naturally light cosmic strings are
produced, satisfying bounds from the Cosmic Microwave Background. The
complementary pulsar timing and cosmic ray bounds require that strings decay
primarily via loops into gravitational waves. Unless the loops are extremely
small, the next generation pulsar timing array will rule out or detect the
string-derived gravitational radiation background in this model.Comment: 38 pages, 1 figure. Discussion of 125GeV Higgs possibility, and of
U(1) decoupling limi
CMB power spectra from cosmic strings: predictions for the Planck satellite and beyond
We present a significant improvement over our previous calculations of the
cosmic string contribution to cosmic microwave background (CMB) power spectra,
with particular focus on sub-WMAP angular scales. These smaller scales are
relevant for the now-operational Planck satellite and additional sub-orbital
CMB projects that have even finer resolutions. We employ larger Abelian Higgs
string simulations than before and we additionally model and extrapolate the
statistical measures from our simulations to smaller length scales. We then use
an efficient means of including the extrapolations into our Einstein-Boltzmann
calculations in order to yield accurate results over the multipole range 2 < l
3000 in
the case of the temperature power spectrum, which then allows cautious
extrapolation to even smaller scales. We find that a string contribution to the
temperature power spectrum making up 10% of power at l=10 would be larger than
the Silk-damped primary adiabatic contribution for l > 3500. Astrophysical
contributions such as the Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect also become important at
these scales and will reduce the sensitivity to strings, but these are
potentially distinguishable by their frequency-dependence.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figure
Universality and Critical Phenomena in String Defect Statistics
The idea of biased symmetries to avoid or alleviate cosmological problems
caused by the appearance of some topological defects is familiar in the context
of domain walls, where the defect statistics lend themselves naturally to a
percolation theory description, and for cosmic strings, where the proportion of
infinite strings can be varied or disappear entirely depending on the bias in
the symmetry. In this paper we measure the initial configurational statistics
of a network of string defects after a symmetry-breaking phase transition with
initial bias in the symmetry of the ground state. Using an improved algorithm,
which is useful for a more general class of self-interacting walks on an
infinite lattice, we extend the work in \cite{MHKS} to better statistics and a
different ground state manifold, namely , and explore various different
discretisations. Within the statistical errors, the critical exponents of the
Hagedorn transition are found to be quite possibly universal and identical to
the critical exponents of three-dimensional bond or site percolation. This
improves our understanding of the percolation theory description of defect
statistics after a biased phase transition, as proposed in \cite{MHKS}. We also
find strong evidence that the existence of infinite strings in the Vachaspati
Vilenkin algorithm is generic to all (string-bearing) vacuum manifolds, all
discretisations thereof, and all regular three-dimensional lattices.Comment: 62 pages, plain LaTeX, macro mathsymb.sty included, figures included.
also available on
http://starsky.pcss.maps.susx.ac.uk/groups/pt/preprints/96/96011.ps.g
Scaling in Numerical Simulations of Domain Walls
We study the evolution of domain wall networks appearing after phase
transitions in the early Universe. They exhibit interesting dynamical scaling
behaviour which is not yet well understood, and are also simple models for the
more phenomenologically acceptable string networks. We have run numerical
simulations in two- and three-dimensional lattices of sizes up to 4096^3. The
theoretically predicted scaling solution for the wall area density A ~ 1/t is
supported by the simulation results, while no evidence of a logarithmic
correction reported in previous studies could be found. The energy loss
mechanism appears to be direct radiation, rather than the formation and
collapse of closed loops or spheres. We discuss the implications for the
evolution of string networks.Comment: 7pp RevTeX, 9 eps files (including six 220kB ones
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