67 research outputs found
Effective Field Theory with a Variable Ultraviolet Cutoff
The properties of strongly gravitating systems suggest that field theory
overcounts the states of a system. Reducing the number of degrees of freedom,
without abandoning the notion of effective field theory, may be achieved
through a connection between the ultraviolet and infrared cutoffs. We provide
an implementation of this idea within the Wilsonian approach to the
renormalization group. We derive an exact flow equation that describes the
evolution of the effective action. We discuss the implications for the
existence of infrared fixed points and the running of couplings. We also give
an alternative derivation in the context of the perturbative renormalization
group.Comment: minor corrections, additional reference
Suppression of Quantum Corrections by Classical Backgrounds
We use heat-kernel techniques in order to compute the one-loop effective
action in the cubic Galileon theory for a background that realizes the
Vainshtein mechanism. We find that the UV divergences are suppressed relative
to the predictions of standard perturbation theory at length scales below the
Vainshtein radius.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, major revision, inclusion of higher-order terms,
version to appear in PR
Anomalous anomalous scaling?
Motivated by speculations about infrared deviations from the standard
behavior of local quantum field theories, we explore the possibility that such
effects might show up as an anomalous running of coupling constants. The most
sensitive probes are presently given by the anomalous magnetic moments of the
electron and the muon, that suggest that alpha_{em} runs 1.00047 +- 0.00018
times faster than predicted by the Standard Model. The running of alpha_{em}
and alpha_s up to the weak scale is confirmed with a precision at the % level.Comment: 4 page
Exact solutions for Vacuum Decay in Unbounded Potentials
The Standard Model Higgs potential may become unbounded from below at large
field values, with important cosmological implications. For a potential of this
form, the commonly assumed scenario of a nucleated thin-wall bubble driving the
transition from the electroweak vacuum to the unstable region does not apply.
We present exact analytical solutions for potentials that have the same
qualitative form as the Higgs potential. They show that the transition is
driven by a thick-wall spherical bubble of true vacuum, with a surface that
expands at asymptotically the speed of light. A `crunch' singularity appears in
the quasi-AdS interior, with the collapsed region also expanding at
asymptotically the speed of light. The singularity is surrounded by a region of
trapped surfaces whose boundary forms an apparent horizon. An event horizon
separates the singularity from the bubble exterior, so that the expansion of
the bubble surface is not affected by the collapse of the interior. The
solutions provide exact descriptions of the geometry for thick-wall bubbles and
are consistent with the analysis of [1,2] for the Higgs potential.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, some clarifications adde
Nonlinear evolution of density and flow perturbations on a Bjorken background
Density perturbations and their dynamic evolution from early to late times
can be used for an improved understanding of interesting physical phenomena
both in cosmology and in the context of heavy-ion collisions. We discuss the
spectrum and bispectrum of these perturbations around a longitudinally
expanding fireball after a heavy-ion collision. The time-evolution equations
couple the spectrum and bispectrum to each other, as well as to higher-order
correlation functions through nonlinear terms. A non-trivial bispectrum is thus
always generated, even if absent initially. For initial conditions
corresponding to a model of independent sources, we discuss the linear and
nonlinear evolution is detail. We show that, if the initial conditions are
sufficiently smooth for fluid dynamics to be applicable, the nonlinear effects
are relatively small.Comment: 32 pages, 17 figures, published versio
Backreaction effects on the matter side of Einstein's field equations
Recently, we have derived a novel and compact expression for how
perturbations in the matter fields of the cosmological fluid can lead to
deviations from the standard Friedmann equations. Remarkably, the dissipative
damping of velocity perturbations by bulk and shear viscosity in the dark
sector can modify the expansion history of the universe on arbitrarily large
scales. In universes in which this effect is sufficiently sizeable, it could
account for the acceleration of the cosmological expansion. But even if dark
matter should be less viscous and if the effect would be correspondingly
smaller, it may have observable consequences in the era of precision cosmology.
Here, we review the origin of this backreaction effect and possibilities to
constrain it further.Comment: 4 pages, to be published in the Moriond Proceedings 201
Bubble-nucleation rates for cosmological phase transitions
We estimate bubble-nucleation rates for cosmological phase transitions. We
concentrate on the evaluation of the pre-exponential factor, for which we give
approximate analytical expressions. Our approach relies on the use of a real
coarse-grained potential. We show how the coarse-graining scale can be
determined in the studies of high-temperature phase transitions. We discuss the
metastability bound on the Higgs-boson mass and the electroweak phase
transition. We find that the saddle-point approximation is reliable in the
first case and breaks down in the second case.Comment: 8 pages, 2 fig.s. Final versio
Modified brane cosmologies with induced gravity, arbitrary matter content and a Gauss-Bonnet term in the bulk
We extend the covariant analysis of the brane cosmological evolution in order
to take into account, apart from a general matter content and an
induced-gravity term on the brane, a Gauss-Bonnet term in the bulk. The
gravitational effect of the bulk matter on the brane evolution can be described
in terms of the total bulk mass as measured by a bulk observer at the location
of the brane. This mass appears in the effective Friedmann equation through a
term characterized as generalized dark radiation that induces mirage effects in
the evolution. We discuss the normal and self-accelerating branches of the
combined system. We also derive the Raychaudhuri equation that can be used in
order to determine if the cosmological evolution is accelerating.Comment: 12 pages, no figures, RevTex 4.0; (v2) new references are added;
(v3,v4) minor changes, acknowledgment is included; to appear in Phys. Rev.
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