11,420 research outputs found
Inflation: From Theory to Observation and Back
Alan Guth introduced cosmologists to inflation at the 1980 Texas Symposium.
Since, inflation has had almost as much impact on cosmology as the big-bang
model itself. However, unlike the big-bang model, it has little observational
support. Hopefully, that situation is about to change as a variety and
abundance of data begin to test inflation in a significant way. The
observations that are putting inflation to test involve the formation of
structure in the Universe, especially measurements of the anisotropy of the
cosmic background radiation. The cold dark matter models of structure formation
motivated by inflation are holding up well as the observational tests become
sharper. In the next decade inflation will be tested even more significantly,
with more precise measurements of CBR anisotropy, the mean density of the
Universe, the Hubble constant, and the distribution of matter, as well as
sensitive searches for the nonbaryonic dark matter predicted to exist by
inflation. As an optimist I believe that we may be well on our way to a
standard cosmology that includes inflation and extends back to around 10^{-32}
sec, providing an important window on the earliest moments and fundamental
physics.Comment: 17 pages LaTeX with 2 eps figure
Can the Type-IIB axion prevent Pre-big Bang inflation?
We look at the possibility of superinflationary behavior in a class of
anisotropic Type-IIB superstring cosmologies in the context of Pre-big Bang
scenario and find that there exists a rather narrow range of parameters for
which these models inflate. We then show that, although in general this
behavior is left untouched by the introduction of a Ramond-Ramond axion field
through a SL(2,R) rotation, there exists a particular class of axions for which
inflation disappears completely. Asymptotic past initial conditions are briefly
discussed, and some speculations on the possible extension of Pre-big Bang
ideas to gravitational collapse are presented.Comment: harvmac, epsf. 3 figures include
Scalar Field as Dark Matter in the Universe
We investigate the hypothesis that the scalar field is the dark matter and
the dark energy in the Cosmos, wich comprises about 95% of the matter of the
Universe. We show that this hypothesis explains quite well the recent
observations on type Ia supernovae.Comment: 4 pages REVTeX, 1 eps figure. Minor changes. To appear in Classical
and Quantum Gravit
XMM-Newton observations of the Small Magellanic Cloud: X-ray outburst of the 6.85 s pulsar XTE J0103-728
A bright X-ray transient was seen during an XMM-Newton observation in the
direction of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) in October 2006. The EPIC data
allow us to accurately locate the source and to investigate its temporal and
spectral behaviour. X-ray spectra covering 0.2-10 keV and pulse profiles in
different energy bands were extracted from the EPIC data. The detection of 6.85
s pulsations in the EPIC-PN data unambiguously identifies the transient with
XTE J0103-728, discovered as 6.85 s pulsar by RXTE. The X-ray light curve
during the XMM-Newton observation shows flaring activity of the source with
intensity changes by a factor of two within 10 minutes. Modelling of
pulse-phase averaged spectra with a simple absorbed power-law indicates
systematic residuals which can be accounted for by a second emission component.
For models implying blackbody emission, thermal plasma emission or emission
from the accretion disk (disk-blackbody), the latter yields physically sensible
parameters. The photon index of the power-law of ~0.4 indicates a relatively
hard spectrum. The 0.2-10 keV luminosity was 2x10^{37} with a contribution of
~3% from the disk-blackbody component. A likely origin for the excess emission
is reprocessing of hard X-rays from the neutron star by optically thick
material near the inner edge of an accretion disk. From a timing analysis we
determine the pulse period to 6.85401(1) s indicating an average spin-down of
~0.0017 s per year since the discovery of XTE J0103-728 in May 2003. The X-ray
properties and the identification with a Be star confirm XTE J0103-728 as
Be/X-ray binary transient in the SMC.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to A&A on 21 Dec. 200
Cosmological scaling solutions of minimally coupled scalar fields in three dimensions
We examine Friedmann-Robertson-Walker models in three spacetime dimensions.
The matter content of the models is composed of a perfect fluid, with a
-law equation of state, and a homogeneous scalar field minimally
coupled to gravity with a self-interacting potential whose energy density
red-shifts as , where a denotes the scale factor. Cosmological
solutions are presented for different range of values of and .
The potential required to agree with the above red-shift for the scalar field
energy density is also calculated.Comment: LaTeX2e, 11 pages, 4 figures. To be published in Classical and
Quantum Gravit
Can Moduli Fields parametrize the Cosmological Constant?
We study the cosmological evolution of string/M moduli fields T. We use
T-duality to fix the potential and show that the superpotential W is a function
of the duality invariant function j(T) only. If W is given as a finite
polynomial of j then the moduli fields {\it do not} give an accelerating
universe, i.e. they {\it cannot} be used as quintessence. Furthermore, at T >>1
the potential is given by a double exponential potential V \simeq e^{-a
e^{\sqrt{2} T}} leading to a fast decaying behaviour at large times. For moduli
potentials with a finite v.e.v. of T the energy density redshift is model
dependent but if T has a finite mass, m < \infty, then the moduli energy
density redshifts faster or equal to matter. Only if the moduli mass is
infinite can the moduli energy density dominate the universe independently of
the initial conditions.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX, 3 postscript figure
XMM-Newton observation of the persistent Be/NS X-ray binary pulsar RX J1037.5-5647 in a low luminosity state
The spectra of several X-ray binary pulsars display a clear soft excess,
which in most cases can be described with a blackbody model, above the main
power-law component. While in the high-luminosity sources it is usually
characterized by low temperature (kT
100 km), in the two persistent and low-luminosity pulsars 4U 0352+309 and RX
J0146.9+6121 this component has a high temperature (kT > 1 keV) and a smaller
radius (R < 0.5 km), consistent with the estimated size of the neutron-star
polar cap. Here we report on the timing and spectral analysis of RX
J1037.5-5647, another low-luminosity persistent Be binary pulsar, based on the
first XMM-Newton observation of this source. We have found a best-fit period P
= 853.4(+/-0.2) s, that implies an average pulsar spin-up dP/dt ~ -2E-8 s/s in
the latest decade. The estimated source luminosity is Lx ~ 10^34 erg/s, a value
comparable to that of the other persistent Be binary pulsars and about one
order of magnitude lower than in most of the previous measurements. The source
spectrum can be described with a power law plus blackbody model, with kTbb =
1.26(+0.16/-0.09) keV and Rbb = 128(+13/-21) m, suggesting a polar-cap origin
of this component. These results strengthen the hypothesis that, in addition to
low luminosities and long periods, this class of sources is characterized also
by common spectral propertiesComment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Dynamical Solutions to the Horizon and Flatness Problems
We discuss in some detail the requirements on an early-Universe model that
solves the horizon and flatness problems during the epoch of classical
cosmology (). We show that a dynamical resolution of
the horizon problem requires superluminal expansion (or very close to it) and
that a truly satisfactory resolution of the flatness problem requires entropy
production. This implies that a proposed class of adiabatic models in which the
Planck mass varies by many orders of magnitude cannot fully resolve the
flatness problem. Furthermore, we show that, subject to minimal assumptions,
such models cannot solve the horizon problem either. Because superluminal
expansion and entropy production are the two generic features of inflationary
models, our results suggest that inflation, or something very similar, may be
the only dynamical solution to the horizon and flatness problems.Comment: 17 page
Quintessence and Scalar Dark Matter in the Universe
Continuing with previous works, we present a cosmological model in which dark
matter and dark energy are modeled by scalar fields and ,
respectively, endowed with the scalar potentials and . This model contains 95% of
scalar field. We obtain that the scalar dark matter mass is The solution obtained allows us to recover the success of the
standard CDM. The implications on the formation of structure are reviewed. We
obtain that the minimal cutoff radio for this model is Comment: 4 pages REVTeX, 3 eps color figures. Minor changes and references
updated. To appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity as a Letter to the
Editor. More information at http://www.fis.cinvestav.mx/~siddh/PHI
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