76 research outputs found
Brane Cosmology and KK Gravitinos
The cosmology of KK gravitinos in models with extra dimensions is considered.
The main result is that the production of such KK modes is not compatible with
an epoch of non--standard expansion after inflation. This is so because the BBN
constraint on the zero mode forces the reduced five dimensional Planck mass
down to values much smaller than the usual four dimensional one, but this
in turn implies many KK states available for a given temperature. Once these
states are taken into account one finds that there is no for which the
produced KK gravitinos satisfy BBN and overclosure constraints. This conclusion
holds for both flat and warped models in which only gravity propagates in the
full spacetime.Comment: 19 pages, references added, IoP styl
Probing polarization states of primordial gravitational waves with CMB anisotropies
We discuss the polarization signature of primordial gravitational waves
imprinted in cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies. The high-energy
physics motivated by superstring theory or M-theory generically yield parity
violating terms, which may produce a circularly polarized gravitational wave
background (GWB) during inflation. In contrast to the standard prediction of
inflation with un-polarized GWB, circularly polarized GWB generates
non-vanishing TB and EB-mode power spectra of CMB anisotropies. We evaluate the
TB and EB-mode power spectra taking into account the secondary effects and
investigate the dependence of cosmological parameters. We then discuss current
constraints on the circularly polarized GWB from large angular scales (l < 16)
of the three year WMAP data. Prospects for future CMB experiments are also
investigated based on a Monte Carlo analysis of parameter estimation, showing
that the circular polarization degree, varepsilon, which is the asymmetry of
the tensor power spectra between right- and left-handed modes normalized by the
total amplitude, can be measured down to |varepsilon| 0.35(r/0.05)^{-0.6}.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figures, Accepted for publication in JCA
Red Density Perturbations and Inflationary Gravitational Waves
We study the implications of recent indications for a red spectrum of
primordial density perturbations for the detection of inflationary
gravitational waves (IGWs) with forthcoming cosmic microwave background
experiments. We find that if inflation occurs with a single field with an
inflaton potential minimized at V=0, then Planck will be able to detect IGWs at
better than 2 confidence level, unless the inflaton potential is a
power law with a very weak power. The proposed satellite missions of the Cosmic
Vision and Inflation Probe programs will be able to detect IGWs from all the
models we have surveyed at better than 5 confidence level. We provide
an example of what is required if the IGW background is to remain undetected
even by these latter experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Supergravity origin of the MSSM inflation
We consider the supergravity origin of the recently proposed MSSM
inflationary model, which relies on the existence of a saddle point along a
dimension six flat direction. We derive the conditions that the Kahler
potential has to satisfy for the saddle point to exist irrespective of the
hidden sector vevs. We show that these conditions are satisfied by a simple
class of Kahler potentials, which we find to have a similar form as in various
string theory compactifications. For these potentials, slow roll MSSM inflation
requires no fine tuning of the soft supersymmetry breaking parameters.Comment: v3: 10 pages, no figures; version accepted for publication. Typos
correcte
Thermal history of the plasma and high-frequency gravitons
Possible deviations from a radiation-dominated evolution, occurring prior the
synthesis of light nuclei, impacted on the spectral energy density of
high-frequency gravitons. For a systematic scrutiny of this situation, the
CDM paradigm must be complemented by (at least two) physical
parameters describing, respectively, a threshold frequency and a slope. The
supplementary frequency scale sets the lower border of a high-frequency domain
where the spectral energy grows with a slope which depends, predominantly, upon
the total sound speed of the plasma right after inflation. While the infra-red
region of the graviton energy spectrum is nearly scale-invariant, the expected
signals for typical frequencies larger than 0.01 nHz are hereby analyzed in a
model-independent framework by requiring that the total sound speed of the
post-inflationary plasma be smaller than the speed of light. Current (e.g.
low-frequency) upper limits on the tensor power spectra (determined from the
combined analysis of the three large-scale data sets) are shown to be
compatible with a detectable signal in the frequency range of wide-band
interferometers. In the present context, the scrutiny of the early evolution of
the sound speed of the plasma can then be mapped onto a reliable strategy of
parameter extraction including not only the well established cosmological
observables but also the forthcoming data from wide band interferometers.Comment: 47 pages, 31 included figures, to appear in Classical and Quantum
Gravit
Indirect Detection of Kaluza-Klein Dark Matter from Latticized Universal Dimensions
We consider Kaluza-Klein dark matter from latticized universal dimensions. We
motivate and investigate two different lattice models, where the models differ
in the choice of boundary conditions. The models reproduce relevant features of
the continuum model for Kaluza-Klein dark matter. For the model with simple
boundary conditions, this is the case even for a model with only a few lattice
sites. We study the effects of the latticization on the differential flux of
positrons from Kaluza-Klein dark matter annihilation in the galactic halo. We
find that for different choices of the compactification radius, the
differential positron flux rapidly converges to the continuum model results as
a function of the number of lattice sites. In addition, we consider the
prospects for upcoming space-based experiments such as PAMELA and AMS-02 to
probe the latticization effect.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures, LaTeX. Final version published in JCA
WMAP and the Generalized Chaplygin Gas
We compare the WMAP temperature power spectrum and SNIa data to models with a
generalized Chaplygin gas as dark energy. The generalized Chaplygin gas is a
component with an exotic equation of state, p_X=-A/\rho^\alpha_X (a polytropic
gas with negative constant and exponent). Our main result is that, restricting
to a flat universe and to adiabatic pressure perturbations for the generalized
Chaplygin gas, the constraints at 95% CL to the present equation of state w_X =
p_X / \rho_X and to the parameter \alpha are -1\leq w_X < -0.8, 0 \leq \alpha
<0.2, respectively. Moreover, we show that a Chaplygin gas (\alpha =1) as a
candidate for dark energy is ruled out by our analysis at more than the 99.99%
CL. A generalized Chaplygin gas as a unified dark matter candidate
(\Omega_{CDM}=0) appears much less likely than as a dark energy model, although
its \chi^2 is only two sigma away from the expected value.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, results clarifie
Entropy perturbations and large-scale magnetic fields
An appropriate gauge-invariant framework for the treatment of magnetized
curvature and entropy modes is developed. It is shown that large-scale magnetic
fields, present after neutrino decoupling, affect curvature and entropy
perturbations. The evolution of different magnetized modes is then studied
across the matter-radiation transition both analytically and numerically. From
the observation that, after equality (but before decoupling) the (scalar)
Sachs-Wolfe contribution must be (predominantly) adiabatic, constraints on the
magnetic power spectra are deduced. The present results motivate the
experimental analysis of more general initial conditions of CMB anisotropies
(i.e. mixtures of magnetized adiabatic and isocurvature modes during the
pre-decoupling phase). The role of the possible correlations between the
different components of the fluctuations is partially discussed.Comment: 43 pages, 9 figure
Study of flavour dependencies in leptogenesis
We study the impact of flavours on the efficiency factors and give analytical
and numerical results of the baryon asymmetry taking into account the different
charged lepton Yukawa contributions and the complete (diagonal and
off-diagonal) to conversion matrix. With this treatment we update
the lower bound on the lightest right-handed neutrino mass.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures. typos corrected, some formulae modified. 2
figures and discussion adde
Kahler potentials for the MSSM inflation and the spectral index
Recently it has been argued that some of the fine-tuning problems of the MSSM
inflation associated with the existence of a saddle point along a flat
direction may be solved naturally in a class of supergravity models. Here we
extend the analysis and show that the constraints on the Kahler potentials in
these models are considerably relaxed when the location of the saddle point is
treated as a free variable. We also examine the effect of supergravity
corrections on inflationary predictions and find that they can slightly alter
the value of the spectral index. As an example, for flat direction field values
we find while the
prediction of the MSSM inflation without any corrections is .Comment: 13 pages, one figure. Typos corrected and a reference adde
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