Misplaced Pages

String cosmology: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 13:47, 7 February 2010 edit76.67.62.213 (talk) Introduction← Previous edit Revision as of 14:42, 19 March 2010 edit undoCitation bot (talk | contribs)Bots5,442,609 editsm Citation maintenance. Added: title, doi. Unified citation types. RjwilmsiNext edit →
Line 5: Line 5:


This approach can be dated back to a paper by ]<ref name="Ven91"> This approach can be dated back to a paper by ]<ref name="Ven91">
{{cite journal|last=Veneziano|first=G.|authorlink=Gabriele Veneziano|title=|journal=]|volume=265|issue=|pages=287|publisher=|location=|date=1991|url=|doi=|id=|doi =|accessdate=}}</ref> that shows how an inflationary cosmological model can be obtained from superstring theory, thus opening the door to a description of pre-big bang scenarios. {{cite journal|last=Veneziano|first=G.|authorlink=Gabriele Veneziano|title=Scale factor duality for classical and quantum strings|journal=]|volume=265|issue=|pages=287|publisher=|location=|date=1991|url=|doi =10.1016/0370-2693(91)90055-U|id=|accessdate=}}</ref> that shows how an inflationary cosmological model can be obtained from superstring theory, thus opening the door to a description of pre-big bang scenarios.


The idea is related to a property of the ] in a curve background, better known as ]. First calculations from this model<ref name="Frie80"> The idea is related to a property of the ] in a curve background, better known as ]. First calculations from this model<ref name="Frie80">
{{cite journal|last=Friedan|first=D.|authorlink=Daniel Friedan|title=|journal=]|volume=45|issue=|pages=1057|publisher=|location=|date=1980|url=http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~friedan/papers/PRL_45_1980_1057.pdf|doi=|id=|accessdate=}}</ref> showed as the ], representing the running of the metric of the model as a function of an energy scale, is proportional to the ] giving rise to a ]. As this model has ] and this must be kept to have a sensible ], the ] must be zero producing immediately ]. While Einstein equations seem to appear somewhat out of place, nevertheless this result is surely striking showing as a background two-dimensional model could produce higher-dimensional physics. An interesting point here is that such a string theory can be formulated without a requirement of criticality at 26 dimensions for consistency as happens on a flat background. This is a serious hint that the underlying physics of Einstein equations could be described by an effective two-dimensional ]. Indeed, the fact that we have evidence for an inflationary universe is an important support to string cosmology. {{cite journal|last=Friedan|first=D.|authorlink=Daniel Friedan|title=Nonlinear Models in 2+ε Dimensions|journal=]|volume=45|issue=|pages=1057|publisher=|location=|date=1980|url=http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~friedan/papers/PRL_45_1980_1057.pdf|doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.45.1057|id=|accessdate=}}</ref> showed as the ], representing the running of the metric of the model as a function of an energy scale, is proportional to the ] giving rise to a ]. As this model has ] and this must be kept to have a sensible ], the ] must be zero producing immediately ]. While Einstein equations seem to appear somewhat out of place, nevertheless this result is surely striking showing as a background two-dimensional model could produce higher-dimensional physics. An interesting point here is that such a string theory can be formulated without a requirement of criticality at 26 dimensions for consistency as happens on a flat background. This is a serious hint that the underlying physics of Einstein equations could be described by an effective two-dimensional ]. Indeed, the fact that we have evidence for an inflationary universe is an important support to string cosmology.


In the evolution of the universe, after the inflationary phase, the expansion observed today sets in that is well described by ]. A smooth transition is expected between these two different phases. String cosmology appears to have difficulties in explaining this transition. This is known in literature as the '''graceful exit problem'''. In the evolution of the universe, after the inflationary phase, the expansion observed today sets in that is well described by ]. A smooth transition is expected between these two different phases. String cosmology appears to have difficulties in explaining this transition. This is known in literature as the '''graceful exit problem'''.
Line 22: Line 22:


being <math>\ ^{(2)}R</math> the ] in two dimensions, <math>\Phi</math> the dilaton field, <math>\alpha'</math> the string constant. We note that <math>a,b=1,2</math> and <math>\mu,\nu=1\ldots D</math>, being D the dimension of the target space. A further antisymmetric field could be added. This is generally considered when one wants this action generating a potential for inflation<ref name="Wands96"> being <math>\ ^{(2)}R</math> the ] in two dimensions, <math>\Phi</math> the dilaton field, <math>\alpha'</math> the string constant. We note that <math>a,b=1,2</math> and <math>\mu,\nu=1\ldots D</math>, being D the dimension of the target space. A further antisymmetric field could be added. This is generally considered when one wants this action generating a potential for inflation<ref name="Wands96">
{{cite journal|last=Easther|first=R.|authorlink=Richard Eather|last2=Maeda|first2=Kei-ichi|authorlink2=Kei-hichi Maeda|first3=D.|last3=Wands|authorlink3=David Wands|title=|journal=]|volume=53|issue=|pages=4247|publisher=|location=|date=1996|url=|doi=|id=|accessdate=}}</ref>. Otherwise, a generic potential is inserted by hand as is also a cosmological constant. {{cite journal|last=Easther|first=R.|authorlink=Richard Eather|last2=Maeda|first2=Kei-ichi|authorlink2=Kei-hichi Maeda|first3=D.|last3=Wands|authorlink3=David Wands|title=Tree-level string cosmology|journal=]|volume=53|issue=|pages=4247|publisher=|location=|date=1996|url=|doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.53.4247|id=|accessdate=}}</ref>. Otherwise, a generic potential is inserted by hand as is also a cosmological constant.


Above string action has a conformal invariance. This is a property of a two dimensional ]. At a quantum level, anomalies make lose this property and the theory itself is not consistent having no ]. So, we must require that ] is kept at any order of ]. ] is the only approach we know to manage this ]. Indeed, ]s at two loops are Above string action has a conformal invariance. This is a property of a two dimensional ]. At a quantum level, anomalies make lose this property and the theory itself is not consistent having no ]. So, we must require that ] is kept at any order of ]. ] is the only approach we know to manage this ]. Indeed, ]s at two loops are
Line 62: Line 62:


==References== ==References==
* {{Citation * {{Cite book
| last=Polchinski | last=Polchinski
| first=Joseph | first=Joseph
Line 71: Line 71:
| isbn=0-521-63303-6 | isbn=0-521-63303-6
}} }}
*{{Citation *{{Cite book
| last=Polchinski | last=Polchinski
| first=Joseph | first=Joseph
Line 96: Line 96:
| date=2000 | date=2000
| url=http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9909061 | url=http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9909061
| doi=10.1016/S0370-1573(00)00064-8
}} }}



Revision as of 14:42, 19 March 2010

This article may require cleanup to meet Misplaced Pages's quality standards. No cleanup reason has been specified. Please help improve this article if you can. (October 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Introduction

String cosmology is a relatively new field that tries to apply equations of string theory to solve the questions of early cosmology. A related area of study is brane cosmology .

This approach can be dated back to a paper by Gabriele Veneziano that shows how an inflationary cosmological model can be obtained from superstring theory, thus opening the door to a description of pre-big bang scenarios.

The idea is related to a property of the bosonic string in a curve background, better known as nonlinear sigma model. First calculations from this model showed as the beta function, representing the running of the metric of the model as a function of an energy scale, is proportional to the Ricci tensor giving rise to a Ricci flow. As this model has conformal invariance and this must be kept to have a sensible quantum field theory, the beta function must be zero producing immediately Einstein equations. While Einstein equations seem to appear somewhat out of place, nevertheless this result is surely striking showing as a background two-dimensional model could produce higher-dimensional physics. An interesting point here is that such a string theory can be formulated without a requirement of criticality at 26 dimensions for consistency as happens on a flat background. This is a serious hint that the underlying physics of Einstein equations could be described by an effective two-dimensional conformal field theory. Indeed, the fact that we have evidence for an inflationary universe is an important support to string cosmology.

In the evolution of the universe, after the inflationary phase, the expansion observed today sets in that is well described by Friedmann equations. A smooth transition is expected between these two different phases. String cosmology appears to have difficulties in explaining this transition. This is known in literature as the graceful exit problem.

An inflationary cosmology implies the presence of a scalar field that drives inflation. In string cosmology, this arises from the so-called dilaton field. This is a scalar term entering into the description of the bosonic string that produces a scalar field term into the effective theory at low energies. The corresponding equations resemble those of a Brans-Dicke theory.

Analysis has been worked out from a critical number of dimension (26) down to four. In general one gets Friedmann equations in an arbitrary number of dimensions. The other way round is to assume that a certain number of dimensions is compactified producing an effective four-dimensional theory to work with. Such a theory is a typical Kaluza-Klein theory with a set of scalar fields arising from compactified dimensions. Such fields are called moduli.

Technical details

We give here some of the relevant equations entering into string cosmology. The starting point is Polyakov action that can be written down as

S 2 = 1 4 π α d 2 z γ [ γ a b G μ ν ( X ) a X μ b X ν + α   ( 2 ) R Φ ( X ) ] {\displaystyle S_{2}={\frac {1}{4\pi \alpha '}}\int d^{2}z{\sqrt {\gamma }}\left}

being   ( 2 ) R {\displaystyle \ ^{(2)}R} the Ricci scalar in two dimensions, Φ {\displaystyle \Phi } the dilaton field, α {\displaystyle \alpha '} the string constant. We note that a , b = 1 , 2 {\displaystyle a,b=1,2} and μ , ν = 1 D {\displaystyle \mu ,\nu =1\ldots D} , being D the dimension of the target space. A further antisymmetric field could be added. This is generally considered when one wants this action generating a potential for inflation. Otherwise, a generic potential is inserted by hand as is also a cosmological constant.

Above string action has a conformal invariance. This is a property of a two dimensional Riemannian manifold. At a quantum level, anomalies make lose this property and the theory itself is not consistent having no unitarity. So, we must require that conformal invariance is kept at any order of perturbation theory. Perturbation theory is the only approach we know to manage this quantum field theory. Indeed, beta functions at two loops are

β μ ν G = R μ ν + 2 α μ Φ ν Φ + O ( α 2 ) {\displaystyle \beta _{\mu \nu }^{G}=R_{\mu \nu }+2\alpha '\nabla _{\mu }\Phi \nabla _{\nu }\Phi +O(\alpha '^{2})}

β Φ = D 26 6 α 2 2 Φ + α κ Φ κ Φ + O ( α 2 ) . {\displaystyle \beta ^{\Phi }={\frac {D-26}{6}}-{\frac {\alpha '}{2}}\nabla ^{2}\Phi +\alpha '\nabla _{\kappa }\Phi \nabla ^{\kappa }\Phi +O(\alpha '^{2}).}

Pretending conformal invariance to hold implies that

β μ ν G = β Φ = 0 {\displaystyle \beta _{\mu \nu }^{G}=\beta ^{\Phi }=0}

producing the corresponding equations of motion of low-energy physics. We are able to satisfy these conditions only perturbatively but this must be true at any order of perturbation theory. The first term in β Φ {\displaystyle \beta ^{\Phi }} is just the anomaly of the bosonic string theory in a flat spacetime. But here we have further terms that can grant a compensation of the anomaly also when D 26 {\displaystyle D\neq 26} and we can build cosmological models of a pre-big bang scenario. Indeed, this low energy equations can be obtained from the following action

S = 1 2 κ 0 2 d D x G e 2 Φ [ 2 ( D 26 ) 3 α + R + 4 μ Φ μ Φ + O ( α ) ] {\displaystyle S={\frac {1}{2\kappa _{0}^{2}}}\int d^{D}x{\sqrt {-G}}e^{-2\Phi }\left}

being κ 0 2 {\displaystyle \kappa _{0}^{2}} a constant that can always be changed by redefining the dilaton field. One can also rewrite this action in a more familiar form by redefining the fields (Einstein frame) as

g μ ν = e 2 ω G μ ν {\displaystyle \,g_{\mu \nu }=e^{2\omega }G_{\mu \nu }\!}

ω = 2 ( Φ 0 Φ ) D 2 {\displaystyle \omega ={\frac {2(\Phi _{0}-\Phi )}{D-2}}}

and being Φ ~ = Φ Φ 0 {\displaystyle {\tilde {\Phi }}=\Phi -\Phi _{0}} we can write

S = 1 2 κ 2 d D x g [ 2 ( D 26 ) 3 α e 4 Φ ~ D 2 + R ~ 4 D 2 μ Φ ~ μ Φ ~ + O ( α ) ] . {\displaystyle S={\frac {1}{2\kappa ^{2}}}\int d^{D}x{\sqrt {-g}}\left.}

being

R ~ = e 2 ω [ R ( D 1 ) 2 ω ( D 2 ) ( D 1 ) μ ω μ ω . {\displaystyle {\tilde {R}}=e^{-2\omega }[R-(D-1)\nabla ^{2}\omega -(D-2)(D-1)\partial _{\mu }\omega \partial ^{\mu }\omega .}

We recognize here the Einstein action describing a scalar field interacting with a gravitational field in D dimensions. Indeed, we have the following identity

κ = κ 0 e 2 Φ 0 = ( 8 π G D ) 1 2 = 8 π M p {\displaystyle \kappa =\kappa _{0}e^{2\Phi _{0}}=(8\pi G_{D})^{\frac {1}{2}}={\frac {\sqrt {8\pi }}{M_{p}}}}

being G D {\displaystyle G_{D}} the Newton constant in D dimensions and M p {\displaystyle M_{p}} the corresponding Planck mass. When we set D = 4 {\displaystyle D=4} in this action, the conditions for inflation are not fulfilled unless we consider adding a potential or considering the antisymmetric term in the string action. In this latter case we can have power law inflation.

Notes

  1. Veneziano, G. (1991). "Scale factor duality for classical and quantum strings". Physics Letters B. 265: 287. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(91)90055-U.
  2. Friedan, D. (1980). "Nonlinear Models in 2+ε Dimensions" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 45: 1057. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.45.1057.
  3. ^ Easther, R.; Maeda, Kei-ichi; Wands, D. (1996). "Tree-level string cosmology". Physical Review D. 53: 4247. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.53.4247.

References

External links

Major subfields of astronomy
Categories: