Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
If you experience any problem watching the video, click the download button below
Download Embed
Preprint
Report number arXiv:2408.13803 ; CERN-TH-2024-108
Title Gravitational Waves from High Temperature Strings
Author(s) Frey, Andrew R. (Winnipeg U.) ; Mahanta, Ratul (Winnipeg U.) ; Maharana, Anshuman (Harish-Chandra Res. Inst.) ; Quevedo, Fernando (Cambridge U., DAMTP ; CERN ; New York U., Abu Dhabi) ; Villa, Gonzalo (Cambridge U., DAMTP)
Publication 43 p.
Document contact Contact: arXiv
Imprint 2024-08-25. - 43 p.
Note 30 pages + appendix, 5 figures
Subject category hep-th ; Particle Physics - Theory
Abstract We study finite temperature effects in string cosmology and their potential gravitational wave signature. Expanding on our recent work arXiv:2310.11494 , we consider a general configuration of highly excited open and closed strings at high enough temperature to be in the Hagedorn phase in 3+1 dimensions, in order to explore its cosmological implications. We find conditions, which can be satisfied in compactifications with moduli stabilization, that allow the long strings to remain in equilibrium in a controlled effective field theory, with equilibration driven by the joining and splitting of the dominant open string population. We calculate the emission rate of gravitons by long open strings, which we show is determined by ten dimensional flat space transition amplitudes available in the literature, and then find the total gravitational wave spectrum generated by the gas of long strings. The gravitational wave spectrum has robust characteristics. It peaks at frequencies of order 50-100 GHz, the same as for gravitational waves from the reheating epoch of the Standard Model. But the amplitude of the string signal is significantly larger than predicted by the Standard Model and its field theoretic extensions. The amplitude and other physical observables (such as the contribution to $\Delta N_{\text eff}$) are directly proportional to the string scale $M_s$; indicating that a potential signal may also determine the string scale. Our calculations provide one of the few examples of a signal of stringy origin that dominates over the field theory predictions. We give a physical explanation of our results and discuss further implications.
Other source Inspire
Copyright/License preprint: (License: CC BY 4.0)



 


 記錄創建於2024-08-28,最後更新在2024-08-30


全文:
Download fulltext
PDF