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13–17 May 2024
University of Pittsburgh / Carnegie Mellon University
US/Eastern timezone

Cosmological Stasis from Dynamical Scalars

15 May 2024, 16:00
15m
Barco Law Building 107 (University of Pittsburgh)

Barco Law Building 107

University of Pittsburgh

Cosmology & Dark Energy Cosmology & Dark Energy

Speaker

Prof. Brooks Thomas (Lafayette College)

Description

It has recently been realized that many extensions of the Standard Model give rise to cosmological histories exhibiting extended epochs of cosmological stasis — epochs wherein the abundances of multiple energy components (such as matter, radiation, or vacuum energy) remain effectively constant despite cosmological expansion. In this talk, I shall discuss a novel realization of stasis involving a collection of scalar fields, each of which dynamically transitions from a period of slow roll to a period of rapid oscillation around its potential minimum as the universe expands. As I shall demonstrate, not only does cosmological stasis arise in such scenarios, but unlike in previous model realizations of this phenomenon, one finds that many properties of the stasis depend non-trivially on the initial conditions. For example, in the presence of an additional cosmological energy component, the system exhibits a tracking behavior wherein the effective equation of state for the universe as a whole evolves toward the equation of state of this energy component. The emergence of such tracking behavior has potential model-building implications in the context of dark-energy and cosmic-inflation scenarios.

Author

Prof. Brooks Thomas (Lafayette College)

Co-authors

Dr Fei Huang (Weizmann Institute) Prof. Keith R. Dienes (University of Arizona) Dr Lucien Heurtier (King's College London) Prof. Timothy M. P. Tait (University of California Irvine)

Presentation materials