1,277 research outputs found
Curvatons in the minimally supersymmetric standard model
Curvaton is an effectively massless field whose energy density during
inflation is negligible but which later becomes dominant. This is a novel
mechanism to generate the scale invariant perturbations. I discuss the
possibility that the curvaton could be found among the fields of the minimally
supersymmetric standard model (MSSM), which contains a number of flat
directions along which the renormalizable potential vanishes. The requirements
of late domination and the absence of damping of the perturbations pick out
essentially a unique candidate for the MSSM curvaton. One must also require
that inflation takes place in a hidden sector. If the inflaton energy density
can be radiated into extra dimensions, many constraints can be relaxed, and the
simplest flat direction consisting of the Higgses H_u and H_d would provide a
working example of an MSSM curvaton.Comment: 16 pages, 1 Figur
A model for fluctuating inflaton coupling: (s)neutrino induced adiabatic perturbations and non-thermal leptogenesis
We discuss an unique possibility of generating adiabatic density
perturbations and leptogenesis from the spatial fluctuations of the inflaton
decay rate. The key assumption is that the initial isocurvature perturbations
are created in the right handed sneutrino sector during inflation which is then
converted into adiabatic perturbations when the inflaton decays. We discuss
distinct imprints on the cosmic micro wave background radiation, which can
distinguish non-thermal versus thermal leptogenesis.Comment: 4 pages, version to be published in PR
Black holes and Higgs stability
We study the effect of primordial black holes on the classical rate of
nucleation of AdS regions within the standard electroweak vacuum. We find that
the energy barrier for transitions to the new vacuum, which characterizes the
exponential suppression of the nucleation rate, can be reduced significantly in
the black-hole background. A precise analysis is required in order to determine
whether the the existence of primordial black holes is compatible with the form
of the Higgs potential at high temperature or density in the Standard Model or
its extensions.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figures, conclusions expanded, to appear in JCA
On Primordial Magnetic Fields of Electroweak Origin
We consider Vachaspati's primordial magnetic field which is generated at the
electroweak phase transition. Assuming that either the gradients of the Higgs
field or, alternatively, the magnetic field itself are stochastic variables
with a normal distribution, we find that the resulting magnetic field has an
{\em rms} value in the present-day universe which is fully consistent with what
is required for the galactic dynamo mechanism.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, no figures. Preprint NBI-HE-93-3
Numerical simulations of fragmentation of the Affleck-Dine condensate
We present numerical simulations of fragmentation of the Affleck-Dine
condensate in two spatial dimensions. We argue analytically that the final
state should consist of both Q-balls and anti-Q-balls in a state of maximum
entropy, with most of the balls small and relativistic. Such a behaviour is
found in simulations on a 100x100 lattice with cosmologically realistic
parameter values. During fragmentation process, we observe filament-like
texture in the spatial distribution of charge. The total charge in Q-balls is
found to be almost equal to the charge in anti-Q-balls and typically orders of
magnitude larger than charge asymmetry. Analytical considerations indicate
that, apart from geometrical factors, the results of the simulated two
dimensional case should apply also to the fully realistic three dimensional
case.Comment: 28 pages, 39 figure
Solitosynthesis of Q-balls
We study the formation of Q-balls in the early universe, concentrating on
potentials with a cubic or quartic attractive interaction. Large Q-balls can
form via solitosynthesis, a process of gradual charge accretion, provided some
primordial charge assymetry and initial ``seed'' Q-balls exist. We find that
such seeds are possible in theories in which the attractive interaction is of
the form , with a light ``Higgs'' mass. Condensate formation
and fragmentation is only possible for masses in the sub-eV range;
these Q-balls may survive untill present.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Q-ball Formation through Affleck-Dine Mechanism
We present the full nonlinear calculation of the formation of a Q-ball
through the Affleck-Dine (AD) mechanism by numerical simulations. It is shown
that large Q-balls are actually produced by the fragmentation of the condensate
of a scalar field whose potential is very flat. We find that the typical size
of a Q-ball is determined by the most developed mode of linearized
fluctuations, and almost all the initial charges which the AD condensate
carries are absorbed into the formed Q-balls, whose sizes and the charges
depend only on the initial charge densities.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 3 postscript figures included, the published versio
Seed perturbations for primordial magnetic fields from MSSM flat directions
We demonstrate that the MSSM flat directions can naturally account for the
seed magnetic fields in the early Universe. The non-zero vacuum expectation
value of an MSSM flat direction condensate provides masses to the gauge fields
and thereby breaks conformal invariance. During inflation the condensate
receives spatial perturbations and gauge currents are
generated together with (hyper)magnetic fields. When these long wavelength
vector perturbations reenter our horizon they give rise to magnetic
fields with an amplitude of Gauss, as required by the dynamo
mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX
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