3,784 research outputs found
On the Spectrum of Fluctuations in an Effective Field Theory of the Ekpyrotic Universe
We consider the four-dimensional effective field theory which has been used
in previous studies of perturbations in the Ekpyrotic Universe, and discuss the
spectrum of cosmological fluctuations induced on large scales by quantum
fluctuations of the bulk brane. By matching cosmological fluctuations on a
constant energy density hypersurface we show that the growing mode during the
very slow collapsing pre-impact phase couples only to the decaying mode in the
expanding post-impact phase, and that hence no scale-invariant spectrum of
adiabatic fluctuations is generated. Note that our conclusions may not apply to
improved toy models for the Ekpyrotic scenario.Comment: 8 pages, few sentences added. Conclusions unchanged. Added
references. Missing name added to Ref. 5
Primordial density perturbations with running spectral index: impact on non-linear cosmic structures
(abridged) We explore the statistical properties of non-linear cosmic
structures in a flat CDM cosmology in which the index of the
primordial power spectrum for scalar perturbations is allowed to depend on the
scale. Within the inflationary paradigm, the running of the scalar spectral
index can be related to the properties of the inflaton potential, and it is
hence of critical importance to test it with all kinds of observations, which
cover the linear and non-linear regime of gravitational instability. We focus
on the amount of running allowed by an updated
combination of CMB anisotropy data and the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey. Our
analysis constrains
at 95% Confidence Level when (not) taking into
account primordial gravitational waves in a ratio as predicted by canonical
single field inflation, in agreement with other works. For the cosmological
models best fitting the data both with and without running we studied the
abundance of galaxy clusters and of rare objects, the halo bias, the
concentration of dark matter halos, the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation, the power
spectrum of cosmic shear, and the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect. We find that
counting galaxy clusters in future X-ray and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich surveys could
discriminate between the two models, more so if broad redshift information
about the cluster samples will be available. Likewise, measurements of the
power spectrum of cosmological weak lensing as performed by planned all-sky
optical surveys such as EUCLID could detect a running of the primordial
spectral index, provided the uncertainties about the source redshift
distribution and the underlying matter power spectrum are well under control.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication on MNRA
Spectra of primordial fluctuations in two-perfect-fluid regular bounces
We introduce analytic solutions for a class of two components bouncing
models, where the bounce is triggered by a negative energy density perfect
fluid. The equation of state of the two components are constant in time, but
otherwise unrelated. By numerically integrating regular equations for scalar
cosmological perturbations, we find that the (would be) growing mode of the
Newtonian potential before the bounce never matches with the the growing mode
in the expanding stage. For the particular case of a negative energy density
component with a stiff equation of state we give a detailed analytic study,
which is in complete agreement with the numerical results. We also perform
analytic and numerical calculations for long wavelength tensor perturbations,
obtaining that, in most cases of interest, the tensor spectral index is
independent of the negative energy fluid and given by the spectral index of the
growing mode in the contracting stage. We compare our results with previous
investigations in the literature.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Inflation and Reheating in Spontaneously Generated Gravity
Inflation is studied in the context of induced gravity (IG) , where is the Ricci scalar, a scalar field and a
dimensionless constant, and diverse symmetry-breaking potentials
are considered. In particular we compared the predictions for Landau-Ginzburg
(LG) and Coleman-Weinberg (CW) type potentials and their possible
generalizations with the most recent data. We find that large field inflation
generally leads to fewer constraints on the parameters and the shape of the
potential whereas small field inflation is more problematic and, if viable,
implies more constraints, in particular on the parameter . We also
examined the reheating phase and obtained an accurate analytical solution for
the dynamics of inflaton and the Hubble parameter by using a multiple scale
analysis (MSA). The solutions were then used to study the average expansion of
the Universe, the average equation of state for the scalar field and both the
perturbative and resonant decays of the inflaton field.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Adiabatic regularization of the graviton stress-energy tensor in de Sitter space-time
We study the renormalized energy-momentum tensor of gravitons in a de Sitter
space-time. After canonically quantizing only the physical degrees of freedom,
we adopt the standard adiabatic subtraction used for massless minimally coupled
scalar fields as a regularization procedure and find that the energy density of
gravitons in the E(3) invariant vacuum is proportional to H^4, where H is the
Hubble parameter, but with a positive sign. According to this result the scalar
expansion rate, which is gauge invariant in de Sitter space-time, is increased
by the fluctuations. This implies that gravitons may then add to conformally
coupled matter in driving the Starobinsky model of inflation.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, final version accepted for publication in PR
Improved CMB anisotropy constraints on primordial magnetic fields from the post-recombination ionization history
We investigate the impact of a stochastic background of Primordial Magnetic
Fields (PMF) generated before recombination on the ionization history of the
Universe and on the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (CMB).
Pre-recombination PMFs are dissipated during recombination and reionization via
decaying MHD turbulence and ambipolar diffusion. This modifies the local matter
and electron temperatures and thus affects the ionization history and Thomson
visibility function. We use this effect to constrain PMFs described by a
spectrum of power-law type, extending our previous study (based on a
scale-invariant spectrum) to arbitrary spectral index. We derive upper bounds
on the integrated amplitude of PMFs due to the separate effect of ambipolar
diffusion and MHD decaying turbulence and their combination. We show that
ambipolar diffusion is relevant for whereas for MHD
turbulence is more important. The bound marginalized over the spectral index on
the integrated amplitude of PMFs with a sharp cut-off is nG. We discuss the quantitative relevance of the assumptions on
the damping mechanism and the comparison with previous bounds.Comment: 11 pages, 21 figures. Minor updates to match the published versio
Isocurvature fluctuations in the effective Newton's constant
We present a new isocurvature mode present in scalar-tensor theories of
gravity that corresponds to a regular growing solution in which the energy of
the relativistic degrees of freedom and the scalar field that regulates the
gravitational strength compensate during the radiation dominated epoch on
scales much larger than the Hubble radius. We study this isocurvature mode and
its impact on anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background for the simplest
scalar-tensor theory, i.e. the extended Jordan-Brans-Dicke gravity, in which
the scalar field also drives the acceleration of the Universe. We use Planck
data to constrain the amplitude of this isocurvature mode in the case of fixed
correlation with the adiabatic mode and we show how this mode could be
generated in a simple two field inflation model.Comment: Version updated to match published version. No changes in the result
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