70 research outputs found
Doppler effect in the oscillator radiation process in the medium
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the radiation process of the
charged particle passing through an external periodic field in a dispersive
medium. In the optical range of spectrum we will consider two cases: first, the
source has not eigenfrequency, and second, the source has eigenfrequency. In
the first case, when the Cherenkov radiation occurs, the non-zero
eigenfrequency produces a paradox for Doppler effect. It is shown that the
absence of the eigenfrequency solves the paradox known in the literature. The
question whether the process is normal (i.e. hard photons are being radiated
under the small angles) or anomalous depends on the law of the medium
dispersion. When the source has an eigenfrequency the Doppler effects can be
either normal or anomalous. In the X-ray range of the oscillator radiation
spectrum we have two photons radiated under the same angle- soft and hard. In
this case the radiation obeys to so-called complicated Doppler effect, i.e. in
the soft photon region we have anomalous Doppler effect and in the hard photon
region we have normal Doppler effect.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
On the Possibility of Medium-Energy Compact X-ray Free-Electron Laser
The problem of X-ray Free-Electron Laser operating on self-amplified
spontaneous emission in irregular microundulator is considered. The case when
the spectrum width of spontaneous radiation is conditioned by the spatial
distribution of sources creating the undulating field is considered. In this
case gain function of the stimulated radiation is dozens of times higher than
that of the conventional undulators. We propose a model of irregular
microundulator, which can be used to construct a drastically cheap and compact
X-ray free-electron laser operating on medium energy electron bunch.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, revtex4, accepted by Armenian Journal of Physic
Dark energy, -attractors, and large-scale structure surveys
Over the last few years, a large family of cosmological attractor models has
been discovered, which can successfully match the latest inflation-related
observational data. Many of these models can also describe a small cosmological
constant , which provides the most natural description of the present
stage of the cosmological acceleration. In this paper, we study
-attractor models with dynamical dark energy, including the
cosmological constant as a free parameter. Predominantly, the models
with converge to the asymptotic regime with the equation of state
. However, there are some models with , which are compatible
with the current observations. In the simplest models with , one
has the tensor to scalar ratio and the asymptotic
equation of state (which in general differs from its
present value). For example, in the seven disk M-theory related model with
one finds and the asymptotic equation of state
is . Future observations, including large-scale structure surveys
as well as B-mode detectors will test these, as well as more general models
presented here. We also discuss gravitational reheating in models of
quintessential inflation and argue that its investigation may be interesting
from the point of view of inflationary cosmology. Such models require a much
greater number of -folds, and therefore predict a spectral index
that can exceed the value in more conventional models by about . This
suggests a way to distinguish the conventional inflationary models from the
models of quintessential inflation, even if they predict .Comment: 61 pages, 27 figures. v3: Improved version in response to referee's
comments; added references, expanded discussion, moved some results to an
appendix; conclusions unchange
The landscape, the swampland and the era of precision cosmology
We review the advanced version of the KKLT construction and pure de
Sitter supergravity, involving a nilpotent multiplet, with regard to various
conjectures that de Sitter state cannot exist in string theory. We explain why
we consider these conjectures problematic and not well motivated, and why the
recently proposed alternative string theory models of dark energy, ignoring
vacuum stabilization, are ruled out by cosmological observations at least at
the level, i.e. with more than confidence.Comment: 48 pages, 10 figures. v2: Improved version; discussions added, typos
fixed, structure modified, appendix added on two-field scenarios, note added
in response to arXiv:1809.00154. v3: Published versio
On nonlocally interacting metrics, and a simple proposal for cosmic acceleration
We propose a simple, nonlocal modification to general relativity (GR) on
large scales, which provides a model of late-time cosmic acceleration in the
absence of the cosmological constant and with the same number of free
parameters as in standard cosmology. The model is motivated by adding to the
gravity sector an extra spin-2 field interacting nonlocally with the physical
metric coupled to matter. The form of the nonlocal interaction is inspired by
the simplest form of the Deser-Woodard (DW) model, ,
with one of the Ricci scalars being replaced by a constant , and gravity
is therefore modified in the infrared by adding a simple term of the form
to the Einstein-Hilbert term. We study cosmic expansion
histories, and demonstrate that the new model can provide background expansions
consistent with observations if is of the order of the Hubble expansion
rate today, in contrast to the simple DW model with no viable cosmology. The
model is best fit by and . We also compare the
cosmology of the model to that of Maggiore and Mancarella (MM),
, and demonstrate that the viable cosmic histories
follow the standard-model evolution more closely compared to the MM model. We
further demonstrate that the proposed model possesses the same number of
physical degrees of freedom as in GR. Finally, we discuss the appearance of
ghosts in the local formulation of the model, and argue that they are
unphysical and harmless to the theory, keeping the physical degrees of freedom
healthy.Comment: 47 pages in JCAP style, 7 figures. Some discussions extended in
response to referee's comments. Version accepted for publication in JCA
The splashback radius in symmetron gravity
The splashback radius has been identified in cosmological
-body simulations as an important scale associated with gravitational
collapse and the phase-space distribution of recently accreted material. We
employ a semi-analytical approach to study the spherical collapse of dark
matter haloes in symmetron gravity and provide insights into how the
phenomenology of splashback is affected. The symmetron is a scalar-tensor
theory of gravity which exhibits a screening mechanism whereby higher-density
regions are screened from the effects of a fifth force. In this model, we find
that, as over-densities grow over cosmic time, the inner region becomes heavily
screened. In particular, we identify a sector of the parameter space for which
material currently sitting at has followed, during the
collapse, the formation of this screened region. As a result, we find that for
this part of the parameter space the splashback radius is maximally affected by
the symmetron force and we predict changes in up to around
compared to its General Relativity value. Because this margin is within
the precision of present splashback experiments, we expect this feature to soon
provide constraints for symmetron gravity on previously unexplored scales.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. Comments are welcom
Massive mimetic cosmology
We study the first cosmological implications of the mimetic theory of massive
gravity recently proposed by Chamseddine and Mukhanov. This is a novel theory
of ghost-free massive gravity which additionally contains a mimetic dark matter
component. In an echo of other modified gravity theories, there are
self-accelerating solutions which contain a ghost instability. In the
ghost-free region of parameter space, the effect of the graviton mass on the
cosmic expansion history amounts to an effective negative cosmological
constant, a radiation component, and a negative curvature term. This allows us
to place constraints on the model parameters---the graviton mass and the
St\"uckelberg vacuum expectation value---by insisting that the effective
radiation and curvature terms be within observational bounds. The late-time
acceleration must be accounted for by a separate positive cosmological constant
or other dark energy sector. We impose further constraints at the level of
perturbations by demanding linear stability. We comment on the possibility of
distinguishing this theory from CDM with current and future
large-scale structure surveys.Comment: 9+1 pages, 1 figure. Version published in PL
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