Mainz-Frankfurt CosmoCoffee

Europe/Zurich
Goethe University Frankfurt

Goethe University Frankfurt

Laura Sagunski (chair), Tamara Caldas Cifuentes (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main), Edwin Genoud-Prachex (University of Frankfurt), Daniel Schmitt
Description

We’re happy to announce that we will have the second Mainz-Frankfurt CosmoCoffee workshop on 26th November 2021 from 2 to 6 pm at Goethe University Frankfurt.

The goal of the Mainz-Frankfurt CosmoCoffee is to bring together the researchers from Goethe University Frankfurt and Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz working on cosmology  and enhance future exchange. 
This time our program will include a plenary talk by Kai Schmitz (CERN) and parallel talks (~20 mins) you can register forWe invite everyone to give a talk about their recent research! The general topic of the workshop will be 'Gravitational waves'. 

It is planned to be a meeting in presence at Goethe University Frankfurt (Campus Riedberg), however with the possibility to join via Zoom as well. Please note that for the in-person attendance the current 2G rules apply.
 
In the end we will close our workshop with a common dinner. 
 
For the registration for our Mainz-Frankfurt CosmoCoffee workshop, please sign up until 17th November 2021 at 11.59 am.

We’re looking forward to seeing you there! 

Participants
    • 12:00
      Common lunch Minerva

      Minerva

      Max-von-Laue-Straße 4, 60438 Frankfurt am Main
    • 1
      Welcome 0.101 (FIAS Building, Goethe University)

      0.101

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

      Speaker: Laura Sagunski
    • 2
      Kai Schmitz (CERN), "Pulsar hints for nanohertz gravitational waves?" 0.101 (FIAS Building, Goethe University)

      0.101

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

      All major pulsar timing array (PTA) collaborations---NANOGrav, Parkes PTA, and EPTA---are now seeing indications of a new stochastic process in their latest data sets. If confirmed in the future, this new signal may turn out to be the first glimpse of a stochastic gravitational-wave background at nanohertz frequencies. In this talk, I will review how PTAs search for gravitational waves, discuss the properties of the newly detected signal, and highlight various possible interpretations. First, I will point out that, if the signal is of astrophysical origin, it is expected to arise from the mergers of supermassive black-hole binaries, in which case it would promise to contain invaluable information on galaxy and black-hole evolution. Then, I will turn to the possibility of a cosmological origin and present a range of exotic particle physics processes in the early Universe that may be responsible for the signal, including cosmic strings, phase transitions, and axion-like fields. In this case, PTA observations would allow us to probe the cosmology of the early Universe and particle physics at extremely high energies. Finally, I will conclude with a brief outlook on the future of the field, which is set to see some amazing progress in the coming years.

      Speaker: Kai Schmitz (CERN)
    • 15:00
      Break FIAS Building, Goethe University

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

    • 3
      Wolfram Ratzinger (Mainz), "Axion fragmentation on the Lattice" 0.101 (FIAS Building, Goethe University)

      0.101

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

      Recently scenarios in which an initially homogeneous field rolls over an oscillatory potential have been popularized by variations of the relaxion mechanism as well as the kinetic misalignment scenario for ALPs. These systems possess an instability that leads to the kinetic energy in the homogeneous field getting transferred to exponentially enhanced fluctuations. I will present a detailed numerical study of this process and speculate on the interesting possibility that bubbles where the field settels in different minima of the potential might arise. When the fluctuations start to dominate, the energy density becomes inhomogeneous and one therefore expects that GWs are emitted. I will show however that the ALPs contribution to DM necessarily over-closes the universe if a signal detectable by pulsar timing arrays or laser interferometers  would be emitted.

      Speaker: Wolfram Ratzinger (Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz)
    • 4
      Stephan Wystub (Frankfurt), "Constraining exotic compact stars composed of bosonic and fermionic dark matter with gravitational wave events" 0.101 (FIAS Building, Goethe Building)

      0.101

      FIAS Building, Goethe Building

      We investigate neutron star-black hole (NS-BH) merger candidates as a test for compact exotic objects. Using the events GW190814, GW200105 and GW200115 measured by the LIGO-Virgo collabration, which represent a broad profile of the masses in the NS mass spectrum, we demonstrate the constraining power for the parameter spaces of compact stars consisting of dark matter for future measurements.

      Speaker: Stephan Wystub
    • 16:30
      Break FIAS Building, Goethe University

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

    • 5
      Niklas Becker (Frankfurt), "Intermediate Mass Ratio Inspirals in Dark Matter Spikes" 0.101 (FIAS Building, Goethe University)

      0.101

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

      To test the particle nature of dark matter, its influence on the inspiral of stellar mass black holes onto intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs) can be studied. If the IMBH forms an adiabatic dark matter spike around it, the smaller black hole will gravitationally interact with and accrete the dark matter particles. Thus, the dark matter spike can be studied and mapped out with the gravitational wave signal that will be observable by LISA.

      Speaker: Niklas Becker
    • 6
      Nicklas Ramberg (Mainz), "QCD Axion Kinetic Misalignment Observational Aspects" 0.101 (FIAS Building, Goethe University)

      0.101

      FIAS Building, Goethe University

      When the spontaneous breaking of the Peccei-Quinn (PQ) symmetry occurred, the resulting angular direction of the PQ field, i.e.\ the axion could have possessed an initial non-zero velocity arising from additional terms that explicitly break the PQ symmetry. I elaborate further on the outcome of the "kinetic misalignment'' framework, assuming that axions form the entirety of the dark matter abundance. The scenario of interest in this talk regards QCD axions where the PQ-symmetry breaking occurs in the post-inflationary universe. I study how the kinetic misalignment framework alters the onset of coherent field oscillations and show how this scenario impacts the formation of axion miniclusters, and I discuss how this scenario alters the usage of axion miniclusters/stars in microlensing events along with tidal stripping.

      Speaker: Nicklas Ramberg
    • 18:00
      Common dinner Zum Lahmen Esel

      Zum Lahmen Esel

      Krautgartenweg 1, 60439 Frankfurt am Main