76 research outputs found
Photon-axion conversion in intergalactic magnetic fields and cosmological consequences
Photon-axion conversion induced by intergalactic magnetic fields causes an
apparent dimming of distant sources, notably of cosmic standard candles such as
supernovae of type Ia (SNe Ia). We review the impact of this mechanism on the
luminosity-redshift relation of SNe Ia, on the dispersion of quasar spectra,
and on the spectrum of the cosmic microwave background. The original idea of
explaining the apparent dimming of distant SNe Ia without cosmic acceleration
is strongly constrained by these arguments. However, the cosmic equation of
state extracted from the SN Ia luminosity-redshift relation remains sensitive
to this mechanism. For example, it can mimic phantom energy.Comment: (14 pages, 9 eps figures) Contribution to appear in a volume of
Lecture Notes in Physics (Springer-Verlag) on Axion
Seminal magnetic fields from Inflato-electromagnetic Inflation
We extend some previous attempts to explain the origin and evolution of
primordial magnetic fields during inflation induced from a 5D vacuum. We show
that the usual quantum fluctuations of a generalized 5D electromagnetic field
cannot provide us with the desired magnetic seeds. We show that special fields
without propagation on the extra non-compact dimension are needed to arrive to
appreciable magnetic strengths. We also identify a new magnetic tensor field
in this kind of extra dimensional theories. Our results are in very
good agreement with observational requirements, in particular from TeV Blazars
and CMB radiation limits we obtain that primordial cosmological magnetic fields
should be close scale invariance.Comment: Improved version. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1007.3891
by other author
Fine-Tuning Solution for Hybrid Inflation in Dissipative Chaotic Dynamics
We study the presence of chaotic behavior in phase space in the
pre-inflationary stage of hybrid inflation models. This is closely related to
the problem of initial conditions associated to these inflationary type of
models. We then show how an expected dissipative dynamics of fields just before
the onset of inflation can solve or ease considerably the problem of initial
conditions, driving naturally the system towards inflation. The chaotic
behavior of the corresponding dynamical system is studied by the computation of
the fractal dimension of the boundary, in phase space, separating inflationary
from non-inflationary trajectories. The fractal dimension for this boundary is
determined as a function of the dissipation coefficients appearing in the
effective equations of motion for the fields.Comment: 10 pages, 4 eps figures (uses epsf), Revtex. Replaced with version to
match one in press Physical Review
Large scale magnetogenesis from a non-equilibrium phase transition in the radiation dominated era
We study the generation of large scale primordial magnetic fields by a
cosmological phase transition during the radiation dominated era. The setting
is a theory of N charged scalar fields coupled to an abelian gauge field, that
undergoes a phase transition at a critical temperature much larger than the
electroweak scale. The dynamics after the transition features two distinct
stages: a spinodal regime dominated by linear long-wavelength instabilities,
and a scaling stage in which the non-linearities and backreaction of the scalar
fields are dominant. This second stage describes the growth of horizon sized
domains. We implement a recently introduced formulation to obtain the spectrum
of magnetic fields that includes the dissipative effects of the plasma. We find
that large scale magnetogenesis is very efficient during the scaling regime.
The ratio between the energy density on scales larger than L and that in the
background radiation r(L,T) = rho_B(L,T)/rho_{cmb}(T) is r(L,T) \sim 10^{-34}
at the Electroweak scale and r(L,T) \sim 10^{-14} at the QCD scale for L \sim 1
Mpc. The resulting spectrum is insensitive to the magnetic diffusion length. We
conjecture that a similar mechanism could be operative after the QCD chiral
phase transition.Comment: LaTex, 25 pages, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Magnetic field generation from non-equilibrium phase transitions
We study the generation of magnetic fields during the stage of particle
production resulting from spinodal instabilities during phase transitions out
of equilibrium. The main premise is that long-wavelength instabilities that
drive the phase transition lead to strong non-equilibrium charge and current
fluctuations which generate electromagnetic fields. We present a formulation
based on the non-equilibrium Schwinger-Dyson equations that leads to an exact
expression for the spectrum of electromagnetic fields valid for general
theories and cosmological backgrounds and whose main ingredient is the
transverse photon polarization out of equilibrium. This formulation includes
the dissipative effects of the conductivity in the medium. As a prelude to
cosmology we study magnetogenesis in Minkowski space-time in a theory of N
charged scalar fields to lowest order in the gauge coupling and to leading
order in the large N within two scenarios of cosmological relevance. The
long-wavelength power spectrum for electric and magnetic fields at the end of
the phase transition is obtained explicitly.
It follows that equipartition between electric and magnetic fields does not
hold out of equilibrium. In the case of a transition from a high temperature
phase, the conductivity of the medium severely hinders the generation of
magnetic fields, however the magnetic fields generated are correlated on scales
of the order of the domain size, which is much larger than the magnetic
diffusion length. Implications of the results to cosmological phase transitions
driven by spinodal unstabilities are discussed.Comment: Preprint no. LPTHE 02-55, 30 pages, latex, 2 eps figures. Added one
reference. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Density perturbations in generalized Einstein scenarios and constraints on nonminimal couplings from the Cosmic Microwave Background
We study cosmological perturbations in generalized Einstein scenarios and
show the equivalence of inflationary observables both in the Jordan frame and
the Einstein frame. In particular the consistency relation relating the
tensor-to-scalar ratio with the spectral index of tensor perturbations
coincides with the one in Einstein gravity, which leads to the same likelihood
results in terms of inflationary observables. We apply this formalism to
nonminimally coupled chaotic inflationary scenarios with potential
and place constraints on the strength of nonminimal couplings using a
compilation of latest observational data. In the case of the quadratic
potential (), the nonminimal coupling is constrained to be for negative from the observational contour
bound. Although the quartic potential () is under a strong observational
pressure for , this property is relaxed by taking into account negative
nonminimal couplings. We find that inflationary observables are within the
contour bound as long as . We also show that
the cases are disfavoured even in the presence of nonminimal
couplings.Comment: 16 pages, 4 eps figure
Modern temporal network theory: A colloquium
The power of any kind of network approach lies in the ability to simplify a
complex system so that one can better understand its function as a whole.
Sometimes it is beneficial, however, to include more information than in a
simple graph of only nodes and links. Adding information about times of
interactions can make predictions and mechanistic understanding more accurate.
The drawback, however, is that there are not so many methods available, partly
because temporal networks is a relatively young field, partly because it more
difficult to develop such methods compared to for static networks. In this
colloquium, we review the methods to analyze and model temporal networks and
processes taking place on them, focusing mainly on the last three years. This
includes the spreading of infectious disease, opinions, rumors, in social
networks; information packets in computer networks; various types of signaling
in biology, and more. We also discuss future directions.Comment: Final accepted versio
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