We show that D-dimensional de Sitter space is unstable to the nucleation of
non-singular geometries containing spacetime regions with different numbers of
macroscopic dimensions, leading to a dynamical mechanism of compactification.
These and other solutions to Einstein gravity with flux and a cosmological
constant are constructed by performing a dimensional reduction under the
assumption of q-dimensional spherical symmetry in the full D-dimensional
geometry. In addition to the familiar black holes, black branes, and
compactification solutions we identify a number of new geometries, some of
which are completely non-singular. The dynamical compactification mechanism
populates lower-dimensional vacua very differently from false vacuum eternal
inflation, which occurs entirely within the context of four-dimensions. We
outline the phenomenology of the nucleation rates, finding that the
dimensionality of the vacuum plays a key role and that among vacua of the same
dimensionality, the rate is highest for smaller values of the cosmological
constant. We consider the cosmological constant problem and propose a novel
model of slow-roll inflation that is triggered by the compactification process.Comment: Revtex. 41 pages with 24 embedded figures. Minor corrections and
added reference