CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

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

+2 Initial conditions for the Galileon dark energy.

kxp265 +1 jtd55 +1

+1 Omnidirectional Gravitational Wave Detector with a Laser-Interferometric Gravitational Compass.

jtd55 +1

+1 A small weak scale from a small cosmological constant.

bump   pxf112 +1

+1 The Radial Acceleration Relation in Rotationally Supported Galaxies.

sxk1031 +1

+1 Anisotropy in the all-sky distribution of galaxy morphological types.

mro28 +1 cjc5 +1

+1 Probing nonstandard neutrino cosmology with terrestrial neutrino experiments.

lxj154 +1

+1 Cosmology with Independently Varying Neutrino Temperature and Number.

mro28 +1

+1 MOND impact of the recently updated mass-discrepancy-acceleration relation.

jtd55 +1

+1 Theory Vision, LHCP 2016.

cjc5 +1

Showing votes from 2016-09-20 11:30 to 2016-09-23 12:30 | Next meeting is Friday Aug 8th, 11:30 am.

users

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.CO

  • Probing nonstandard neutrino cosmology with terrestrial neutrino experiments.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Akshay Ghalsasi, David McKeen, Ann E. Nelson
     

    Neutrino masses and the number of light neutrino species can be tested in a variety of laboratory experiments and also can be constrained by particle astrophysics and precision cosmology. A conflict between these various results could be an indication of new physics in the neutrino sector. In this paper we explore the possibility for reconciliation of otherwise discrepant results in a simple model containing a light scalar field which produces Mass Varying Neutrinos (MaVaNs). We extend previous work on MaVaNs to consider issues of neutrino clumping, the effects of additional contributions to neutrino mass, and reconciliation of eV mass sterile neutrinos with cosmology.

  • Cosmology with Independently Varying Neutrino Temperature and Number.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Richard Galvez, Robert J. Scherrer
     

    We consider Big Bang nucleosynthesis and the cosmic microwave background in a model in which both the neutrino temperature and neutrino number are allowed to vary from their standard values. The neutrino temperature is assumed to differ from its standard model value by a given factor from Big Bang nucleosynthesis up to the present. In this scenario, the effective number of relativistic degrees of freedom, $N_{\rm eff}^{\rm CMB}$, derived from observations of the cosmic microwave background is not equal to the true number of neutrinos, $N_\nu$. We determine the element abundances predicted by Big Bang nucleosynthesis as a function of the neutrino number and temperature, converting the latter to the equivalent value of $N_{\rm eff}^{\rm CMB}$. We find that a value of $N_{\rm eff}^{\rm CMB} \approx 3$ can be made consistent with $N_\nu = 4$ with a decrease in the neutrino temperature of $\sim 5\%$, while $N_\nu = 5$ is excluded for any value of $N_{\rm eff}^{\rm CMB}$. No observationally-allowed values for $N_{\rm eff}^{\rm CMB}$ and $N_\nu$ can solve the lithium problem.

  • Initial conditions for the Galileon dark energy.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Cristiano Germani, Universitat de Barcelona)
     

    Galileon models are among the most appealing candidates for Dark Energy. The reason is twofold: classically, they provide a tracking solution leading to an almost DeSitter space starting from very generic initial conditions in the deep radiation era. The second reason is the standard lore that Galileons are quantum mechanically stable. The latter property is certainly true in flat space-time, thanks to the non-renormalization theorems of galilean coupling constants. However, in a cosmological background, we show that quantum effects might dominate the classical trajectory. Assuming the radiation era to last at least up to the electroweak phase transition, the trajectory with initial conditions sitting on the tracker is ruled out. On the other hand, it is always possible to find a sub-space of initial conditions such that the dark energy solution approaches stably the tracker at late times. Fixing the value of initial conditions that best fit current data, and assuming that the galileon effective theory is valid up to the beginning of the radiation epoch, we found that the reheating temperature of the universe cannot be larger than $10^8 \ {\rm GeV}$. Reversing the argument, if dark energy will turn out to be in form of Galileons, the bounds by EUCLID on the initial conditions for these models will also be a bound on the reheating temperature of our Universe.

  • MOND impact of the recently updated mass-discrepancy-acceleration relation.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Mordehai Milgrom
     

    McGaugh et al. (2016) have used their extensive SPARC sample to update the well-known mass-discrepancy-acceleration relation (MDAR), which is one of the major predicted "MOND laws". This is not a newly discovered relation. Rather, it improves on the many previous studies of it, with more and better data. Like its precedents, it bears crucial ramifications for the observed dynamical anomalies in disc galaxies, and, in particular, on their resolution by the MOND paradigm. Their result, indeed, constitute a triumph for MOND. However, unlike previous analyses of the MDAR, McGaugh et al. have chosen to obfuscate the MOND roots of their analysis, and its connection with, and implications for, this paradigm. For example, the fitting formula they use, seemingly as a result of some unexplained inspiration, follows in its salient properties from the basic tenets of MOND, and has already been used in the past in several MOND analyses. No other possible origin for such a function is known. Given that this formula had already been shown to reproduce correctly the observed rotation curves from the baryon distribution (as a MOND effect), it must have been clear, a priory, that it should describe correctly the MDAR, which is but a summary of rotation curves. The present paper corrects these oversights -- bringing to light the deep connections with MOND, suppressed by McGaugh et al. It also gives due credit to previous works, and discusses some new, important, but less known, aspects of this MOND relation.

astro-ph.HE

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astro-ph.GA

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astro-ph.IM

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gr-qc

  • Omnidirectional Gravitational Wave Detector with a Laser-Interferometric Gravitational Compass.- [PDF] - [Article]

    M.D. Maia, Ivan S. Ferreira, Claudio M. G. Sousa, Nadja S. Magalhaes, Carlos Frajuca
     

    Based on the Szekeres-Pirani gravitational compass we suggest the addition of a fourth, non-coplanar mass/mirror to the presently existing laser based gravitational wave observatories, enabling them to operate omnidirectionally, to filter out ambiguous interpretations and to point out the direction of the gravitational wave source.

hep-ph

  • A small weak scale from a small cosmological constant.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Asimina Arvanitaki, Savas Dimopoulos, Victor Gorbenko, Junwu Huang, Ken Van Tilburg
     

    We propose a framework in which Weinberg's anthropic explanation of the cosmological constant problem also solves the hierarchy problem. The weak scale is selected by chiral dynamics that controls the stabilization of an extra dimension. When the Higgs vacuum expectation value is close to a fermion mass scale, the radius of an extra dimension becomes large, and develops an enhanced number of vacua available to scan the cosmological constant down to its observed value. At low energies, the radion necessarily appears as an unnaturally light scalar, in a range of masses and couplings accessible to fifth-force searches as well as scalar dark matter searches with atomic clocks and gravitational-wave detectors. The fermion sector that controls the size of the extra dimension consists of a pair of electroweak doublets and several singlets. These leptons satisfy approximate mass relations related to the weak scale and are accessible to the LHC and future colliders.

hep-th

  • No papers in this section today!

hep-ex

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quant-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

other

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