66 research outputs found
Semi-Analytic Calculation of the Gravitational Wave Signal From the Electroweak Phase Transition for General Quartic Scalar Effective Potentials
Upcoming gravitational wave (GW) detectors might detect a stochastic
background of GWs potentially arising from many possible sources, including
bubble collisions from a strongly first-order electroweak phase transition. We
investigate whether it is possible to connect, via a semi-analytical
approximation to the tunneling rate of scalar fields with quartic potentials,
the GW signal through detonations with the parameters entering the potential
that drives the electroweak phase transition. To this end, we consider a finite
temperature effective potential similar in form to the Higgs potential in the
Standard Model (SM). In the context of a semi-analytic approximation to the
three dimensional Euclidean action, we derive a general approximate form for
the tunneling temperature and the relevant GW parameters. We explore the GW
signal across the parameter space describing the potential which drives the
phase transition. We comment on the potential detectability of a GW signal with
future experiments, and physical relevance of the associated potential
parameters in the context of theories which have effective potentials similar
in form to that of the SM. In particular we consider singlet, triplet, higher
dimensional operators, and top-flavor extensions to the Higgs sector of the SM.
We find that the addition of a temperature independent cubic term in the
potential, arising from a gauge singlet for instance, can greatly enhance the
GW power. The other parameters have milder, but potentially noticeable,
effects.Comment: accepted by JCAP, revisions: removed turbulence contribution, minor
changes to experimental sensitivity, fixed various minor typos and text
revisions, added references, made it clear we consider only detonations; 17
pages, 4 figures, revtex
Gravitational Waves from Mesoscopic Dynamics of the Extra Dimensions
Recent models which describe our world as a brane embedded in a higher
dimensional space introduce new geometrical degrees of freedom: the shape
and/or size of the extra dimensions, and the position of the brane. These modes
can be coherently excited by symmetry breaking in the early universe even on
``mesoscopic'' scales as large as 1 mm, leading to detectable gravitational
radiation. Two sources are described: relativistic turbulence caused by a
first-order transition of a radion potential, and Kibble excitation of
Nambu-Goldstone modes of brane displacement. Characteristic scales and spectral
properties are estimated and the prospects for observation by LISA are
discussed. Extra dimensions with scale between 10 \AA and 1 mm, which enter the
3+1-D era at cosmic temperatures between 1 and 1000 TeV, produce backgrounds
with energy peaked at observed frequencies in the LISA band, between
and Hz. The background is detectable above instrument and
astrophysical foregrounds if initial metric perturbations are excited to a
fractional amplitude of or more, a likely outcome for the
Nambu-Goldstone excitations.Comment: Latex, 5 pages, plus one figure, final version to appear in Phys.
Rev. Let
A Characterisation of Strong Wave Tails in Curved Space-Times
A characterisation of when wave tails are strong is proposed. The existence
of a curvature induced tail (i.e. a Green's function term whose support
includes the interior of the light-cone) is commonly understood to cause
backscattering of the field governed by the relevant wave equation. Strong
tails are characterised as those for which the purely radiative part of the
field is backscattered. With this definition, it is shown that electromagnetic
waves in asymptotically flat space-times and fields governed by tail-free
propagation have weak tails, but minimally coupled scalar fields in a
cosmological scenario have strong tails.Comment: 17 pages, Revtex, to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
The surfing effect in the interaction of electromagnetic and gravitational waves. Limits on the speed of gravitational waves
In the current work we investigate the propagation of electromagnetic waves
in the field of gravitational waves. Starting with simple case of an
electromagnetic wave travelling in the field of a plane monochromatic
gravitational wave we introduce the concept of surfing effect and analyze its
physical consequences. We then generalize these results to an arbitrary
gravitational wave field. We show that, due to the transverse nature of
gravitational waves, the surfing effect leads to significant observable
consequences only if the velocity of gravitational waves deviates from speed of
light. This fact can help to place an upper limit on the deviation of
gravitational wave velocity from speed of light. The micro-arcsecond resolution
promised by the upcoming precision interferometry experiments allow to place
stringent upper limits on as a function of the energy
density parameter for gravitational waves . For this limit amounts to
Graviton Production in Elliptical and Hyperbolic Universes
The problem of cosmological graviton creation for homogeneous and isotropic
universes with elliptical (\vae =+1) and hyperbolical (\vae =-1) geometries
is addressed. The gravitational wave equation is established for a
self-gravitating fluid satisfying the barotropic equation of state , which is the source of the Einstein's equations plus a cosmological
-term. The time dependent part of this equation is exactly solved in
terms of hypergeometric functions for any value of and spatial
curvature \vae. An expression representing an adiabatic vacuum state is then
obtained in terms of associated Legendre functions whenever , where n is an integer. This includes most
cases of physical interest such as . The mechanism of
graviton creation is reviewed and the Bogoliubov coefficients related to
transitions between arbitrary cosmic eras are also explicitly evaluated.Comment: 25 pages, uses REVTE
CMB Anisotropies: Total Angular Momentum Method
A total angular momentum representation simplifies the radiation transport
problem for temperature and polarization anisotropy in the CMB. Scattering
terms couple only the quadrupole moments of the distributions and each moment
corresponds directly to the observable angular pattern on the sky. We develop
and employ these techniques to study the general properties of anisotropy
generation from scalar, vector and tensor perturbations to the metric and the
matter, both in the cosmological fluids and from any seed perturbations (e.g.
defects) that may be present. The simpler, more transparent form and derivation
of the Boltzmann equations brings out the geometric and model-independent
aspects of temperature and polarization anisotropy formation. Large angle
scalar polarization provides a robust means to distinguish between isocurvature
and adiabatic models for structure formation in principle. Vector modes have
the unique property that the CMB polarization is dominated by magnetic type
parity at small angles (a factor of 6 in power compared with 0 for the scalars
and 8/13 for the tensors) and hence potentially distinguishable independent of
the model for the seed. The tensor modes produce a different sign from the
scalars and vectors for the temperature-polarization correlations at large
angles. We explore conditions under which one perturbation type may dominate
over the others including a detailed treatment of the photon-baryon fluid
before recombination.Comment: 32 pg., 10 figs., RevTeX, minor changes reflect published version,
minor typos corrected, also available at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~wh
Energetics of the Einstein-Rosen spacetime
A study covering some aspects of the Einstein--Rosen metric is presented. The
electric and magnetic parts of the Weyl tensor are calculated. It is shown that
there are no purely magnetic E--R spacetimes, and also that a purely electric
E--R spacetime is necessarily static. The geodesics equations are found and
circular ones are analyzed in detail. The super--Poynting and the
``Lagrangian'' Poynting vectors are calculated and their expressions are found
for two specific examples. It is shown that for a pulse--type solution, both
expressions describe an inward radially directed flow of energy, far behind the
wave front. The physical significance of such an effect is discussed.Comment: 19 pages Latex.References added and updated.To appear in
Int.J.Theor.Phy
Gravitational Waves from Gravitational Collapse
Gravitational wave emission from the gravitational collapse of massive stars
has been studied for more than three decades. Current state of the art
numerical investigations of collapse include those that use progenitors with
realistic angular momentum profiles, properly treat microphysics issues,
account for general relativity, and examine non--axisymmetric effects in three
dimensions. Such simulations predict that gravitational waves from various
phenomena associated with gravitational collapse could be detectable with
advanced ground--based and future space--based interferometric observatories.Comment: 68 pages including 13 figures; revised version accepted for
publication in Living Reviews in Relativity (http://www.livingreviews.org
Physics, Astrophysics and Cosmology with Gravitational Waves
Gravitational wave detectors are already operating at interesting sensitivity
levels, and they have an upgrade path that should result in secure detections
by 2014. We review the physics of gravitational waves, how they interact with
detectors (bars and interferometers), and how these detectors operate. We study
the most likely sources of gravitational waves and review the data analysis
methods that are used to extract their signals from detector noise. Then we
consider the consequences of gravitational wave detections and observations for
physics, astrophysics, and cosmology.Comment: 137 pages, 16 figures, Published version
<http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2009-2
Orbital effects of a monochromatic plane gravitational wave with ultra-low frequency incident on a gravitationally bound two-body system
We analytically compute the long-term orbital variations of a test particle
orbiting a central body acted upon by an incident monochromatic plane
gravitational wave. We assume that the characteristic size of the perturbed
two-body system is much smaller than the wavelength of the wave. Moreover, we
also suppose that the wave's frequency is much smaller than the particle's
orbital one. We make neither a priori assumptions about the direction of the
wavevector nor on the orbital geometry of the planet. We find that, while the
semi-major axis is left unaffected, the eccentricity, the inclination, the
longitude of the ascending node, the longitude of pericenter and the mean
anomaly undergo non-vanishing long-term changes. They are not secular trends
because of the slow modulation introduced by the tidal matrix coefficients and
by the orbital elements themselves. They could be useful to indepenedently
constrain the ultra-low frequency waves which may have been indirectly detected
in the BICEP2 experiment. Our calculation holds, in general, for any
gravitationally bound two-body system whose characteristic frequency is much
larger than the frequency of the external wave. It is also valid for a generic
perturbation of tidal type with constant coefficients over timescales of the
order of the orbital period of the perturbed particle.Comment: LaTex2e, 24 pages, no figures, no tables. Changes suggested by the
referees include
- …