19 research outputs found
Charged Scalar Self-Mass during Inflation
We compute the one loop self-mass of a charged massless, minimally coupled
scalar in a locally de Sitter background geometry. The computation is done in
two different gauges: the noninvariant generalization of Feynman gauge which
gives the simplest expression for the photon propagator and the de Sitter
invariant gauge of Allen and Jacobson. In each case dimensional regularization
is employed and fully renormalized results are obtained. By using our result in
the linearized, effective field equations one can infer how the scalar responds
to the dielectric medium produced by inflationary particle production. We also
work out the result for a conformally coupled scalar. Although the conformally
coupled case is of no great physical interest the fact that we obtain a
manifestly de Sitter invariant form for its self-mass-squared establishes that
our noninvariant gauge introduces no physical breaking of de Sitter invariance
at one loop order.Comment: 41 pages, LaTeX 2epsilon, 3 figures, uses axodra
Scalar Field Equations from Quantum Gravity during Inflation
We exploit a previous computation of the self-mass-squared from quantum
gravity to include quantum corrections to the scalar evolution equation. The
plane wave mode functions are shown to receive no significant one loop
corrections at late times. This result probably applies as well to the inflaton
of scalar-driven inflation. If so, there is no significant correction to the
correlator that plays a crucial role in computations of the power
spectrum.Comment: 19 pages, 5 table
One Loop Corrected Mode Functions for SQED during Inflation
We solve the one loop effective scalar field equations for spatial plane
waves in massless, minimally coupled scalar quantum electrodynamics on a
locally de Sitter background. The computation is done in two different gauges:
a non-de Sitter invariant analogue of Feynman gauge, and in the de Sitter
invariant, Lorentz gauge. In each case our result is that the finite part of
the conformal counterterm can be chosen so that the mode functions experience
no significant one loop corrections at late times. This is in perfect agreement
with a recent, all orders stochastic prediction.Comment: 26 pages, uses LaTeX 2 epsilon, no figures, version 2 has an updated
reference lis
Reply to `Can infrared gravitons screen ?'
We reply to the recent criticism by Garriga and Tanaka of our proposal that
quantum gravitational loop corrections may lead to a secular screening of the
effective cosmological constant. Their argument rests upon a renormalization
scheme in which the composite operator is defined to be the trace of the renormalized field equations.
Although this is a peculiar prescription, we show that it {\it does not
preclude secular screening}. Moreover, we show that a constant Ricci scalar
{\it does not even classically} imply a constant expansion rate. Other
important points are: (1) the quantity of Garriga and Tanaka is
neither a properly defined composite operator, nor is it constant; (2) gauge
dependence does not render a Green's function devoid of physical content; (3)
scalar models on a non-dynamical de Sitter background (for which there is no
gauge issue) can induce arbitrarily large secular contributions to the stress
tensor; (4) the same secular corrections appear in observable quantities in
quantum gravity; and (5) the prospects seem good for deriving a simple
stochastic formulation of quantum gravity in which the leading secular effects
can be summed and for which the expectation values of even complicated, gauge
invariant operators can be computed at leading order.Comment: 17 pages, no figures, uses LaTeX 2epsilon. Version 2 adds important
points about R_ren being neither finite nor constant, and that a constant
Ricci scalar is not even classically an indicator of de Sitter expansion.
Version 3 corrects some typoes and updates the reference
Yukawa Scalar Self-Mass on a Conformally Flat Background
We compute the one loop self-mass-squared of a massless, minimally coupled
scalar which is Yukawa-coupled to a massless Dirac fermion in a general
conformally flat background. Dimensional regularization is employed and a fully
renormalized result is obtained. For the special case of a locally de Sitter
background our result is manifestly de Sitter invariant. By solving the
effective field equations we show that the scalar mode functions acquire no
significant one loop corrections. In particular, the phenomenon of
super-adiabatic amplification is not affected. One consequence is that the
scalar-catalyzed production of fermions during inflation should not be reduced
by changes in the scalar sector before it has time to go to completion.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX 2epsilon, 3 figures (uses axodraw
Leading Log Solution for Inflationary Yukawa
We generalize Starobinskii's stochastic technique to the theory of a
massless, minimally coupled scalar interacting with a massless fermion in a
locally de Sitter geometry. The scalar is an ``active'' field that can engender
infrared logarithms. The fermion is a ``passive'' field that cannot cause
infrared logarithms but which can carry them, and which can also induce new
interactions between the active fields. The procedure for dealing with passive
fields is to integrate them out, then stochastically simplify the resulting
effective action following Starobinski\u{\i}. Because Yukawa theory is
quadratic in the fermion this can be done explicitly using the classic solution
of Candelas and Raine. We check the resulting stochastic formulation against an
explicit two loop computation. We also derive a nonperturbative, leading log
result for the stress tensor. Because the scalar effective potential induced by
fermions is unbounded below, back-reaction from this model might dynamically
cancel an arbitrarily large cosmological constant.Comment: 35 pages, LaTeX 2epsilon, 4 figures (using axodraw), version 2 has an
updated reference lis
High Frequency Asymptotics for the Spin-Weighted Spheroidal Equation
We fully determine a uniformly valid asymptotic behaviour for large and fixed of the angular solutions and eigenvalues of the
spin-weighted spheroidal differential equation. We fully complement the
analytic work with a numerical study.Comment: The .tar.gz file should contain 1 tex file, 24 figures in .ps format
and 1 bibliography file in .bbl format. All these files are located in the
same director
Cosmology is not a Renormalization Group Flow
A critical examination is made of two simple implementations of the idea that
cosmology can be viewed as a renormalization group flow. Both implementations
are shown to fail when applied to a massless, minimally coupled scalar with a
quartic self-interaction on a locally de Sitter background. Cosmological
evolution in this model is not driven by any RG screening of couplings but
rather by inflationary particle production gradually filling an initially empty
universe with a sea of long wavelength scalars.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, uses revtex4, version 2 revised slightly for
publication in Physical Review Letter
Two Loop Scalar Bilinears for Inflationary SQED
We evaluate the one and two loop contributions to the expectation values of
two coincident and gauge invariant scalar bilinears in the theory of massless,
minimally coupled scalar quantum electrodynamics on a locally de Sitter
background. One of these bilinears is the product of two covariantly
differentiated scalars, the other is the product of two undifferentiated
scalars. The computations are done using dimensional regularization and the
Schwinger-Keldysh formalism. Our results are in perfect agreement with the
stochastic predictions at this order.Comment: 43 pages, LaTeX 2epsilon, 5 figures (using axodraw.sty) Version 2 has
updated references and important corrections to Tables 3-5 and to eqns
(139-141), (145-146), (153-155), (158) and (160
Quantization of fermions on Kerr space-time
We study a quantum fermion field on a background nonextremal Kerr black hole. We discuss the definition of the standard black hole quantum states (Boulware, Unruh, and Hartle-Hawking), focussing particularly on the differences between fermionic and bosonic quantum field theory. Since all fermion modes (both particle and antiparticle) have positive norm, there is much greater flexibility in how quantum states are defined compared with the bosonic case. In particular, we are able to define a candidate Boulware-like state, empty at both past and future null infinity, and a candidate Hartle-Hawking-like equilibrium state, representing a thermal bath of fermions surrounding the black hole. Neither of these states have analogues for bosons on a nonextremal Kerr black hole and both have physically attractive regularity properties. We also define a number of other quantum states, numerically compute differences in expectation values of the fermion current and stress-energy tensor between two states, and discuss their physical properties