185 research outputs found
Fermionic current-carrying cosmic strings: zero-temperature limit and equation of state
The equation of state for a superconducting cosmic string whose current is
due to fermionic zero modes is derived analytically in the case where the
back-reaction of the fermions to the background is neglected. It is first shown
that the zero mode fermions follow a zero temperature distribution because of
their interactions (or lack thereof) with the string-forming Higgs and gauge
fields. It is then found that the energy per unit length U and the tension T
are related to the background string mass m through the simple relation
U+T=2m*m. Cosmological consequences are briefly discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, uses ReVTe
Dynamical stability for the gravitational evolution of a homogeneous polytrope
URL: http://www-spht.cea.fr/articles/s00/008 Stabilité dynamique de l'évolution gravitationnelle d'un polytrope homogèneThe dynamic stability of the spherical gravitational evolution (collapse or expansion) for a homogeneous polytropic gas with any exponent is studied using the lagrangian formalism. We obtain the analytical expression for density perturbations at the first order. In the case the Jeans'criterion is easily generalized to a self-similar expanding background. The collapsing case is found to be always unstable. The stability of density modes obtained for does not introduce any conditions on the wavelength perturbation, but only a criterion on the polytropic index. As a result, stability is obtained for an expanding gas provided $\gamma 5/3.
Cosmic string loop distribution on all length scales and at any redshift
We analytically derive the expected number density distribution of Nambu-Goto
cosmic string loops at any redshift soon after the time of string formation to
today. Our approach is based on the Polchinski-Rocha model of loop formation
from long strings which we adjust to fit numerical simulations and complement
by a phenomenological modelling of gravitational backreaction. Cosmological
evolution drives the loop distribution towards scaling on all length scales in
both the radiation and matter era. Memory of any reasonable initial loop
distribution in the radiation era is shown to be erased well before Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis. In the matter era, the loop distribution reaches full scaling,
up to some residual loops from the radiation era which may be present for
extremely low string tension. Finally, the number density of loops below the
gravitational cutoff is shown to be scale independent, proportional to a
negative power of the string tension and insensitive to the details of the
backreaction modelling. As an application, we show that the energy density
parameter of loops today cannot exceed 10^(-5) for currently allowed string
tension values, while the loop number density cannot be less than 10^(-6) per
Mpc^3. Our result should provide a more robust basis for studying the
cosmological consequences of cosmic string loops.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures, uses iopart. References added, matches published
versio
Microlensing by Cosmic Strings
We consider the signature and detectability of gravitational microlensing of
distant quasars by cosmic strings. Because of the simple image configuration
such events will have a characteristic light curve, in which a source would
appear to brighten by exactly a factor of two, before reverting to its original
apparent brightness. We calculate the optical depth and event rate, and
conclude that current predictions and limits on the total length of strings on
the sky imply optical depths of \la 10^{-8} and event rates of fewer than one
event per sources per year. Disregarding those predictions but replacing
them with limits on the density of cosmic strings from the CMB fluctuation
spectrum, leaves only a small region of parameter space (in which the sky
contains about strings with deficit angle of order 0.3
milli-arcseconds) for which a microlensing survey of exposure
source-years, spanning a 20--40-year period, might reveal the presence of
cosmic strings.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
The bispectrum of matter perturbations from cosmic strings
We present the first calculation of the bispectrum of the matter perturbations induced by cosmic strings. The calculation is performed in two different ways: the first uses the unequal time correlators (UETCs) of the string network - computed using a Gaussian model previously employed for cosmic string power spectra. The second approach uses the wake model, where string density perturbations are concentrated in sheet-like structures whose surface density grows with time. The qualitative and quantitative agreement of the two gives confidence to the results. An essential ingredient in the UETC approach is the inclusion of compensation factors in the integration with the Green's function of the matter and radiation fluids, and we show that these compensation factors must be included in the wake model also. We also present a comparison of the UETCs computed in the Gaussian model, and those computed in the unconnected segment model (USM) used by the standard cosmic string perturbation package CMBACT. We compare numerical estimates for the bispectrum of cosmic strings to those produced by perturbations from an inflationary era, and discover that, despite the intrinsically non-Gaussian nature of string-induced perturbations, the matter bispectrum is unlikely to produce competitive constraints on a population of cosmic strings
Graviton confinement inside hypermonopoles of any dimension
We show the generic existence of metastable massive gravitons in the
four-dimensional core of self-gravitating hypermonopoles in any number of
infinite-volume extra-dimensions. Confinement is observed for Higgs and gauge
bosons couplings of the order unity. Provided these resonances are light
enough, they realise the Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati mechanism by inducing a
four-dimensional gravity law on some intermediate length scales. The effective
four-dimensional Planck mass is shown to be proportional to a negative power of
the graviton mass. As a result, requiring gravity to be four-dimensional on
cosmological length scales may solve the mass hierarchy problem.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, uses iopart. Misprints corrected, references
added, matches published versio
Continuous self-similar evaporation of a rotating cosmic string loop
A solution of the linearized Einstein and Nambu-Goto equations is constructed
which describes the evaporation of a certain type of rotating cosmic string -
the Allen-Casper-Ottewill loop - under the action of its own self-gravity. The
solution evaporates self-similarly, and radiates away all its mass-energy and
momentum in a finite time. Furthermore, the corresponding weak-field metric can
be matched to a remnant Minkowski spacetime at all points on the future light
cone of the final evaporation point of the loop.Comment: 80 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in Classical and
Quantum Gravit
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