215 research outputs found
Hybrid Inflation Exit through Tunneling
For hybrid inflationary potentials, we derive the tunneling rate from field
configurations along the flat direction towards the waterfall regime. This
process competes with the classically rolling evolution of the scalar fields
and needs to be strongly subdominant for phenomenologically viable models.
Tunneling may exclude models with a mass scale below 10^12 GeV, but can be
suppressed by small values of the coupling constants. We find that tunneling is
negligible for those models, which do not require fine tuning in order to
cancel radiative corrections, in particular for GUT-scale SUSY inflation. In
contrast, electroweak scale hybrid inflation is not viable, unless the
inflaton-waterfall field coupling is smaller than approximately 10^-11.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
Constraining the Natural MSSM through tunneling to color-breaking vacua at zero and non-zero temperature
We re-evaluate the constraints on the parameter space of the minimal
supersymmetric standard model from tunneling to charge- and/or color-breaking
minima, taking into account thermal corrections. We pay particular attention to
the region known as the Natural MSSM, where the masses of the scalar partners
of the top quarks are within an order of magnitude or so of the electroweak
scale. These constraints arise from the interaction between these scalar tops
and the Higgs fields, which allows the possibility of parameter points having
deep charge- and color-breaking true vacua. In addition to requiring that our
electro-weak-symmetry-breaking, yet QCD- and electromagnetism-preserving vacuum
has a sufficiently long lifetime at zero temperature, also demanding stability
against thermal tunneling further restricts the allowed parameter space.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, software available from
http://vevacious.hepforge.org/ - version 2 matches that accepted for
publication in Phys. Lett.
Lamb Shift of Unruh Detector Levels
We argue that the energy levels of an Unruh detector experience an effect
similar to the Lamb shift in Quantum Electrodynamics. As a consequence, the
spectrum of energy levels in a curved background is different from that in flat
space. As examples, we consider a detector in an expanding Universe and in
Rindler space, and for the latter case we suggest a new expression for the
local virtual energy density seen by an accelerated observer. In the
ultraviolet domain, that is when the space between the energy levels is larger
than the Hubble rate or the acceleration of the detector, the Lamb shift
quantitatively dominates over the thermal response rate.Comment: 20 page
Energy Density in Expanding Universes as Seen by Unruh's Detector
We consider the response of an Unruh detector to scalar fields in an
expanding space-time. When combining transition elements of the scalar field
Hamiltonian with the interaction operator of detector and field, one finds at
second order in time-dependent perturbation theory a transition amplitude,
which actually dominates in the ultraviolet over the first order contribution.
In particular, the detector response faithfully reproduces the particle number
implied by the stress-energy of a minimally coupled scalar field, which is
inversely proportional to the energy of a scalar mode. This finding disagrees
with the contention that in de Sitter space, the response of the detector drops
exponentially with particle energy and therefore indicates a thermal spectrum.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
Axion-Photon Conversion in 3D Media and Astrophysical Plasmas
With axions now a primary candidate for dark matter, understanding their
indirect astrophysical signatures is of paramount importance. Key to this is
the production of photons from axions in magnetised astrophysical plasmas.
While simple formulae for axion-photon mixing in 1D have been sketched several
decades ago, there has recently been renewed interest in robust calculations
for this process in arbitrary 3D plasmas. These calculations are vital for
understanding, amongst other things, the radio production from axion dark
matter conversion in neutron stars, which may lead to indirect axion dark
matter detection with current telescopes or future searches, e.g., by the SKA.
In this paper, we derive the relevant transport equations in magnetised
plasmas. These equations describe both the production and propagation of
photons in an arbitrary 3D medium due to the resonant conversion of axions into
photons. They also fully incorporate the refraction of photons, and we find no
evidence for a conjectured phenomenon of de-phasing. Our result is free of
divergences which plagued previous calculations, and our kinetic theory
description provides a direct link between ray tracing and the production
mechanism. These results mark an important step toward solving one of the major
open questions concerning indirect searches of axions in recent years, namely
how to compute the photon production rate from axions in arbitrary 3D plasmas.Comment: 45 Pages, 5 figures. Comments welcom
Superradiance in stars: non-equilibrium approach to damping of fields in stellar media
Superradiance in black holes is well-understood but a general treatment for superradiance in stars has until now been lacking. This is surprising given the ease with which we can observe isolated neutron stars and the array of signatures which would result from stellar superradiance. In this work, we present the first systematic pipeline for computing superradiance rates in rotating stars. Our method can be used with any Lagrangian describing the interaction between the superradiant field and the constituents of the star. Our scheme falls into two parts: firstly we show how field theory at finite density can be used to express the absorption of long wavelength modes into the star in terms of microphsyical scattering processes. This allows us to derive a damped equation of motion for the bosonic field. We then feed this into an effective theory for long wavelengths (the so-called worldline formalism) to describe the amplification of superradiant modes of arbitrary multipole moment for a rapidly rotating star. Our method places stellar superradiance on a firm theoretical footing and allows the calculation of the superradiance rate arising from any interaction between a bosonic field and stellar matter
Dynamic water routing using a predictor-corrector method with sediment routing
Submitted to Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Dept. of the Interior.September 1982.Bibliography: pages 61-63.Project no. B-228-COLO
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