CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+2 Chameleon Dark Energy and Atom Interferometry.

jbm120 +1 cad96 +1

+2 What Happens in a Measurement?.

qxc76 +1 oxg34 +1

+1 Primordial Black Holes: Observational Characteristics of The Final Evaporation. - [UPDATED]

kxp265 +1

+1 A Novel Approach to Extra Dimensions.

kxp265 +1

+1 Tunneling from a Minkowski vacuum to an AdS vacuum: A new thin-wall regime.

kxp265 +1

+1 Keplerian rotation of our Galaxy. - [UPDATED]

cjc5 +1

+1 Warm Ekpyrosis.

cad96 +1

+1 Robust Inflation from Fibrous Strings.

cad96 +1

+1 Non-Abelian clouds around Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes: the existence line.

sxz353 +1

+1 Challenges and prospects for better measurements of the CMB intensity spectrum.

lxj154 +1 cjc5 +1

+1 Area, Entanglement Entropy and Supertranslations at Null Infinity.

qxc76 +1

Showing votes from 2016-03-22 11:30 to 2016-03-25 12:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 5th, 10:30 am.

users

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.CO

  • Challenges and prospects for better measurements of the CMB intensity spectrum.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Giorgio Sironi
     

    Spectral distortions of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) offer the possibility of probing processes which occurred during the evolution of our Universe going back up to Z$\simeq 10^7$. Unfortunately all the attempts so far carried out for detecting distortions failed. All of them were based on comparisons among absolute measurements of the CMB temperature at different frequencies. We suggest a different approach: measurements of the frequency derivative of the CMB temperature over large frequency intervals instead of observations of the absolute temperature at few, well separated, frequencies as frequently done in the past. The best observing conditions can be found in space. We discuss therefore the perspectives of new observations in the next years from the ground, at very special sites, and in space as independent missions or as part of other CMB projects

astro-ph.HE

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.GA

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.IM

  • No papers in this section today!

gr-qc

  • Area, Entanglement Entropy and Supertranslations at Null Infinity.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Daniel Kapec, Ana-Maria Raclariu, Andrew Strominger
     

    The area of a cross-sectional cut $\Sigma$ of future null infinity ($\mathcal{I}^+$) is infinite. We define a finite, renormalized area by subtracting the area of the same cut in any one of the infinite number of BMS-degenerate classical vacua. The renormalized area acquires an anomalous dependence on the choice of vacuum. We relate it to the modular energy, including a soft graviton contribution, of the region of $\mathcal{I}^+$ to the future of $\Sigma$. Under supertranslations, the renormalized area shifts by the supertranslation charge of $\Sigma$. In quantum gravity, we conjecture a bound relating the renormalized area to the entanglement entropy across $\Sigma$ of the outgoing quantum state on $\mathcal{I}^+$.

hep-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

hep-th

  • A Novel Approach to Extra Dimensions.- [PDF] - [Article]

    David J. Jackson
     

    Four-dimensional spacetime, together with a natural generalisation to extra dimensions, is obtained through an analysis of the structures and symmetries deriving from possible arithmetic expressions for one-dimensional time. On taking the infinitesimal limit this simple one-dimensional structure can be consistently equated with a homogeneous form of arbitrary dimension possessing both spacetime and more general symmetries. An extended 4-dimensional manifold, with the associated spacetime symmetry, provides a natural breaking mechanism for a higher-dimensional form and symmetry of time. It will be described how this symmetry breaking leads to a series of distinct properties of the Standard Model of particle physics, deriving directly from the natural mathematical development of the theory.

  • Tunneling from a Minkowski vacuum to an AdS vacuum: A new thin-wall regime.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Ali Masoumi, Sonia Paban, Erick J. Weinberg
     

    Using numerical and analytic methods, we study quantum tunneling from a Minkowski false vacuum to an anti-de Sitter true vacuum. Scanning the parameter space of theories with quartic and non-polynomial potentials, we find that for any given potential tunneling is completely quenched if gravitational effects are made sufficiently strong. For potentials where $\epsilon$, the energy density difference between the vacua, is small compared to the barrier height, this occurs in the thin-wall regime studied by Coleman and De Luccia. However, we find that other potentials, possibly with $\epsilon$ much greater than the barrier height, produce a new type of thin-wall bounce when gravitational effects become strong. We show that the critical curve that bounds the region in parameter space where the false vacuum is stable can be found by a computationally simple overshoot/undershoot argument. We discuss the treatment of boundary terms in the bounce calculation and show that, with proper regularization, one obtains an identical finite result for the tunneling exponent regardless of whether or not these are included. Finally, we briefly discuss the extension of our results to transitions between anti-de Sitter vacua.

hep-ex

  • No papers in this section today!

quant-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

other

  • No papers in this section today!