30 research outputs found
A formal introduction to Horndeski and Galileon theories and their generalizations
We review different constructions of Galileon theories in both flat and
curved space, and for both single scalar field models as well as multi-field
models. Our main emphasis is on the formal mathematical properties of these
theories and their construction.Comment: 19 page
Counting the degrees of freedom of generalized Galileons
We consider Galileon models on curved spacetime, as well as the counterterms
introduced to maintain the second-order nature of the field equations of these
models when both the metric and the scalar are made dynamical. Working in a
gauge invariant framework, we first show how all the third-order time
derivatives appearing in the field equations -- both metric and scalar -- of a
Galileon model or one defined by a given counterterm can be eliminated to leave
field equations which contain at most second-order time derivatives of the
metric and of the scalar. The same is shown to hold for arbitrary linear
combinations of such models, as well as their k-essence-like/Horndeski
generalizations. This supports the claim that the number of degrees of freedom
in these models is only 3, counting 2 for the graviton and 1 for the scalar. We
comment on the arguments given previously in support of this claim. We then
prove that this number of degrees of freedom is strictly less that 4 in one
particular such model by carrying out a full-fledged Hamiltonian analysis. In
contrast to previous results, our analyses do not assume any particular gauge
choice of restricted applicability.Comment: 27 pages, no figure; v2: short explanation added below Eq. (42),
improved Sec. II.B.
Multi-field DBI inflation: introducing bulk forms and revisiting the gravitational wave constraints
We study multi-field Dirac-Born-Infeld (DBI) inflation models, taking into
account the NS-NS and R-R bulk fields present in generic flux
compactifications. We compute the second-order action, which governs the
behaviour of linear cosmological perturbations, as well as the third-order
action, which can be used to calculate non-Gaussianities in these models.
Remarkably, for scalar-type perturbations, we show that the contributions due
to the various form fields exactly cancel in both the second- and third-order
actions. Primordial perturbations and their non-Gaussianities are therefore
unaffected by the presence of form fields and our previous results are
unmodified. We also study vector-type perturbations associated with the U(1)
gauge field confined on the D3-brane, and discuss whether their quantum
fluctuations can be amplified. Finally, we revisit the gravitational wave
constraints on DBI inflation and show that an ultra-violet DBI multi-field
scenario is still compatible with data, in contrast with the single field case,
provided there is a transfer from entropy into adiabatic perturbations.Comment: 22 page
Primordial fluctuations and non-Gaussianities in multi-field DBI inflation
We study Dirac-Born-Infeld (DBI) inflation models with multiple scalar
fields. We show that the adiabatic and entropy modes propagate with a common
effective sound speed and are thus amplified at the sound horizon crossing. In
the small sound speed limit, we find that the amplitude of the entropy modes is
much higher than that of the adiabatic modes. We show that this could strongly
affect the observable curvature power spectrum as well as the amplitude of
non-Gaussianities, although their shape remains as in the single-field DBI
case.Comment: 4 page
Brane Gas Inflation
We consider the brane gas picture of the early universe. At later stages,
when there are no winding modes and the background is free to expand, we show
that a moving 3-brane, which we identify with our universe, can inflate even
though it is radiation-dominated. The crucial ingredients for successful
inflation are the coupling to the dilaton and the equation of state of the
bulk. If we suppose the brane initially forms in a collision of
higher-dimensional branes, then the spectrum of primordial density fluctuations
naturally has a thermal origin.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Constraints on the fundamental string coupling from B-mode experiments
We study signatures of cosmic superstring networks containing strings of
multiple tensions and Y-junctions, on the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
temperature and polarisation spectra. Focusing on the crucial role of the
string coupling constant , we show that the number density and energy
density of the scaling network are dominated by different types of string in
the and limits. This can lead to an observable shift
in the position of the B-mode peak --- a distinct signal leading to a direct
constraint on . We forecast the joint bounds on and the fundamental
string tension from upcoming and future CMB polarisation experiments,
as well as the signal to noise in detecting the difference between B-mode
signals in the limiting cases of large and small . We show that such a
detectable shift is within reach of planned experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; v2: matches version published in PR
Non-BPS Brane Cosmology
We study cosmology on a BPS D3-brane evolving in the 10D SUGRA background
describing a non-BPS brane. Initially the BPS brane is taken to be a probe
whose dynamics we determine in the non-compact non-BPS background. The
cosmology observed on the brane is of the FRW type with a scale factor
. In this mirage cosmology approach, there is no self-gravity on the
brane which cannot inflate. Self-gravity is then included by compactifying the
background space-time. The low energy effective theory below the
compactification scale is shown to be bi-metric, with matter coupling to a
different metric than the geometrically induced metric on the brane. The
geometrical scale factor on the brane is now where
arises from brane self-gravity. In this non-BPS scenario the brane generically
inflates. We study the resulting inflationary scenario taking into account the
fact that the non-BPS brane eventually decays on a time-scale much larger than
the typical inflationary time-scale. After the decay, the theory ceases to be
bi-metric and COBE normalization is used to estimate the string scale which is
found to be of order GeV.Comment: 20 pages, JHEP3.cl
Joint population and cosmological properties inference with gravitational waves standard sirens and galaxy surveys
Gravitational wave (GW) sources at cosmological distances can be used to probe the expansion rate of the Universe. GWs directly provide a distance estimation of the source but no direct information on its redshift. The optimal scenario to obtain a redshift is through the direct identification of an electromagnetic (EM) counterpart and its host galaxy. With almost 100 GW sources detected without EM counterparts (dark sirens), it is becoming crucial to have statistical techniques able to perform cosmological studies in the absence of EM emission. Currently, only two techniques for dark sirens are used on GW observations; the spectral siren method, which is based on the source-frame mass distribution to estimate conjointly cosmology and the source’s merger rate, and the galaxy survey method, which uses galaxy surveys to assign a probabilistic redshift to the source while fitting cosmology. It has been recognized, however, that these two methods are two sides of the same coin. In this paper, we present a novel approach to unify these two methods. We apply this approach to several observed GW events using the glade+ galaxy catalog discussing limiting cases. We provide estimates of the Hubble constant, modified gravity propagation effects, and population properties for binary black holes. We also estimate the binary black hole merger rate per galaxy to be 10−6–10−5 yr−1 depending on the galaxy catalog hypotheses
Detection of early-universe gravitational-wave signatures and fundamental physics
Detection of a gravitational-wave signal of non-astrophysical origin would be a landmark discovery, potentially providing a significant clue to some of our most basic, big-picture scientific questions about the Universe. In this white paper, we survey the leading early-Universe mechanisms that may produce a detectable signal—including inflation, phase transitions, topological defects, as well as primordial black holes—and highlight the connections to fundamental physics. We review the complementarity with collider searches for new physics, and multimessenger probes of the large-scale structure of the Universe.Peer reviewe
Cosmology with the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna
254 pags:, 44 figs.The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) has two scientific objectives of cosmological focus: to probe the expansion rate of the universe, and to understand stochastic gravitational-wave backgrounds and their implications for early universe and particle physics, from the MeV to the Planck scale. However, the range of potential cosmological applications of gravitational-wave observations extends well beyond these two objectives. This publication presents a summary of the state of the art in LISA cosmology, theory and methods, and identifies new opportunities to use gravitational-wave observations by LISA to probe the universe.This work is partly supported by: A.G. Leventis Foundation; Academy of Finland
Grants 328958 and 345070; Alexander S. Onassis Foundation, Scholarship ID: FZO 059-1/2018-2019;
Amaldi Research Center funded by the MIUR program “Dipartimento di Eccellenza” (CUP:
B81I18001170001); ASI Grants No. 2016-24-H.0 and No. 2016-24-H.1-2018; Atracción de Talento
Grant 2019-T1/TIC-15784; Atracción de Talento contract no. 2019-T1/TIC-13177 granted by the
Comunidad de Madrid; Ayuda ‘Beatriz Galindo Senior’ by the Spanish ‘Ministerio de Universidades’,
Grant BG20/00228; Basque Government Grant (IT-979-16); Belgian Francqui Foundation; Centre national
d’Etudes spatiales; Ben Gurion University Kreitman Fellowship, and the Israel Academy of Sciences and
Humanities (IASH) & Council for Higher Education (CHE) Excellence Fellowship Program for
International Postdoctoral Researchers; Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa Program SEV-2016-0597;
CERCA program of the Generalitat de Catalunya; Cluster of Excellence “Precision Physics, Fundamental
Interactions, and Structure of Matter” (PRISMA? EXC 2118/1); Comunidad de Madrid, Contrato de
Atracción de Talento 2017-T1/TIC-5520; Czech Science Foundation GAČR, Grant No. 21-16583M; Delta
ITP consortium; Department of Energy under Grant No. DE-SC0008541, DE-SC0009919 and DESC0019195; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), Project ID 438947057; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under Germany’s Excellence Strategy - EXC 2121 Quantum Universe - 390833306; European
Structural and Investment Funds and the Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (Project
CoGraDS - CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/15 003/0000437); European Union’s H2020 ERC Consolidator Grant
“GRavity from Astrophysical to Microscopic Scales” (Grant No. GRAMS-815673); European Union’s
H2020 ERC, Starting Grant Agreement No. DarkGRA-757480; European Union’s Horizon 2020
programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement 860881 (ITN HIDDeN); European
Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme Grant No. 796961, “AxiBAU” (K.S.);
European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research Council grant 724659 MassiveCosmo ERC-2016-COG; FCT
through national funds (PTDC/FIS-PAR/31938/2017) and through project “BEYLA – BEYond LAmbda”
with Ref. Number PTDC/FIS-AST/0054/2021; FEDER-Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional
through COMPETE2020 - Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalização (POCI-01-0145-
FEDER-031938) and research Grants UIDB/04434/2020 and UIDP/04434/2020; Fondation CFM pour la
Recherche in France; Foundation for Education and European Culture in Greece; French ANR project
MMUniverse (ANR-19-CE31-0020); FRIA Grant No.1.E.070.19F of the Belgian Fund for Research, F.R.
S.-FNRS Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) through Contract No. DL 57/2016/CP1364/
CT0001; Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) through Grants UIDB/04434/2020, UIDP/04434/
2020, PTDC/FIS-OUT/29048/2017, CERN/FIS-PAR/0037/2019 and “CosmoTests – Cosmological tests of
gravity theories beyond General Relativity” CEECIND/00017/2018; Generalitat Valenciana Grant
PROMETEO/2021/083; Grant No. 758792, project GEODESI; Government of Canada through the
Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development and Province of Ontario through the
Ministry of Colleges and Universities; Grants-in-Aid for JSPS Overseas Research Fellow (No.
201960698); I?D Grant PID2020-118159GB-C41 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation;
INFN iniziativa specifica TEONGRAV; Israel Science Foundation (Grant No. 2562/20); Japan Society for
the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI Grant Nos. 20H01899 and 20H05853; IFT Centro de
Excelencia Severo Ochoa Grant SEV-2; Kavli Foundation and its founder Fred Kavli; Minerva
Foundation; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion Grant PID2020-113644GB-I00; NASA Grant
80NSSC19K0318; NASA Hubble Fellowship grants No. HST-HF2-51452.001-A awarded by the Space
Telescope Science Institute with NASA contract NAS5-26555; Netherlands Organisation for Science and
Research (NWO) Grant Number 680-91-119; new faculty seed start-up grant of the Indian Institute of
Science, Bangalore, the Core Research Grant CRG/2018/002200 of the Science and Engineering; NSF
Grants PHY-1820675, PHY-2006645 and PHY-2011997; Polish National Science Center Grant 2018/31/D/
ST2/02048; Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange within the Polish Returns Programme under
Agreement PPN/PPO/2020/1/00013/U/00001; Pró-Reitoria de Pesquisa of Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais (UFMG) under Grant No. 28359; Ramón y Cajal Fellowship contract RYC-2017-23493; Research
Project PGC2018-094773-B-C32 [MINECO-FEDER]; Research Project PGC2018-094773-B-C32
[MINECO-FEDER]; ROMFORSK Grant Project. No. 302640; Royal Society Grant URF/R1/180009
and ERC StG 949572: SHADE; Shota Rustaveli National Science Foundation (SRNSF) of Georgia (Grant
FR/18-1462); Simons Foundation/SFARI 560536; SNSF Ambizione grant; SNSF professorship Grant
(No. 170547); Spanish MINECO’s “Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa” Programme Grants SEV-2016-
0597 and PID2019-110058GB-C22; Spanish Ministry MCIU/AEI/FEDER Grant (PGC2018-094626-BC21); Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2020-115845GB-I00/AEI/10.13039/
501100011033); Spanish Proyectos de I?D via Grant PGC2018-096646-A-I00; STFC Consolidated
Grant ST/T000732/1; STFC Consolidated Grants ST/P000762/1 and ST/T000791/1; STFC Grant ST/
S000550/1; STFC Grant ST/T000813/1; STFC Grants ST/P000762/1 and ST/T000791/1; STFC under the
research Grant ST/P000258/1; Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), project The Non-Gaussian
Universe and Cosmological Symmetries, Project Number: 200020-178787; Swiss National Science
Foundation Professorship Grants No. 170547 and No. 191957; SwissMap National Center for Competence
in Research; “The Dark Universe: A Synergic Multi-messenger Approach” Number 2017X7X85K under
the MIUR program PRIN 2017; UK Space Agency; UKSA Flagship Project, Euclid.Peer reviewe