85 research outputs found
Nielsen-Olesen strings in Supersymmetric models
We investigate the behaviour of a model with two oppositely charged scalar
fields. In the Bogomol'nyi limit this may be seen as the scalar sector of N=1
supersymmetric QED, and it has been shown that cosmic strings form. We examine
numerically the model out of the Bogomol'nyi limit, and show that this remains
the case. We then add supersymmetry-breaking mass terms to the supersymmetric
model, and show that strings still survive.
Finally we consider the extension to N=2 supersymmetry with
supersymmetry-breaking mass terms, and show that this leads to the formation of
stable cosmic strings, unlike in the unbroken case.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figues, uses revtex4; minor typos corrected; references
adde
Gravitating Semilocal strings
We discuss the properties of semilocal strings minimally coupled to gravity.
Semilocal strings are solutions of the bosonic sector of the Standard Model in
the limit (where is the Weinberg angle) and
correspond to embedded Abelian-Higgs strings for a particular choice of the
scalar doublet. We focus on the limit where the gauge boson mass is equal to
the Higgs boson mass such that the solutions fulfill the
Bogomolnyi-Prasad-Sommerfield (BPS) bound.Comment: Contribution to the Proceedings of the Spanish Relativity Meeting
(ERE) 2009, Bilbao, Spai
The effects of inhomogeneities on the cosmology of type IIB conifold transitions
In this paper we examine the evolution of the effective field theory
describing a conifold transition in type IIB string theory. Previous studies
have considered such dynamics starting from the cosmological approximation of
homogeneous fields, here we include the effects of inhomogeneities by using a
real-time lattice field theory simulation. By including spatial variations we
are able to simulate the effect of currents and the gauge fields which they
source. We identify two different regimes where the inhomogeneities have
opposite effects, one where they aid the system to complete the conifold
transition and another where they hinder it. The existence of quantized fluxes
in related systems has lead to the speculation that (unstable) string solutions
could exist, using our simulations we give strong evidence that these
string-like defects do not form.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Published versio
Measuring global monopole velocities, one by one
We present an estimation of the average velocity of a network of global
monopoles in a cosmological setting using large numerical simulations. In order
to obtain the value of the velocity, we improve some already known methods, and
present a new one. This new method estimates individual global monopole
velocities in a network, by means of detecting each monopole position in the
lattice and following the path described by each one of them. Using our new
estimate we can settle an open question previously posed in the literature:
velocity-dependent one-scale (VOS) models for global monopoles predict two
branches of scaling solutions, one with monopoles moving at subluminal speeds
and one with monopoles moving at luminal speeds. Previous attempts to estimate
monopole velocities had large uncertainties and were not able to settle that
question. Our simulations find no evidence of a luminal branch. We also
estimate the values of the parameters of the VOS model. With our new method we
can also study the microphysics of the complicated dynamics of individual
monopoles. Finally we use our large simulation volume to compare the results
from the different estimator methods, as well as to asses the validity of the
numerical approximations made.Comment: v2: Minor changes. Matches published version. 22 pages, 4 figures.
v3: Erratum added that corrects a mistake in a formula and the corresponding
tables, without modifying the conclussion
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