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Gravitational wave signals of extra dimensions

Gravitational wave signals of extra dimensions. Ruth Gregory Durham, UK COSMO12, Beijing 10/9/12. Tasos Avgoustidis, Sarah Chadburn, Ghazal Geshnizjani, Eimear O’Callaghan, and Ivonne Zavala PRL 105:081602 (2010) [1003.4395], JCAP 09 (2010) 013 [1005.3220], & JCAP 03 (2011) 004. Outline.

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Gravitational wave signals of extra dimensions

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  1. Gravitational wave signals of extra dimensions Ruth Gregory Durham, UK COSMO12, Beijing 10/9/12 Tasos Avgoustidis, Sarah Chadburn, Ghazal Geshnizjani, Eimear O’Callaghan, and Ivonne Zavala PRL 105:081602 (2010) [1003.4395], JCAP 09 (2010) 013 [1005.3220], & JCAP 03 (2011) 004

  2. Outline • Brief overview • Gravitational waves and strings • String motion with extra dimensions • Cusp and Kink events • Prospects for detection

  3. Brane Inflation In brane inflation, we imagine an (anti-)brane moving on the internal extra dimensions and extended along the noncompact directions. The higher dimensional information is encoded in a scalar describing the brane position: The Inflaton. Inflation ends when the anti-brane meets the brane and annihilates. Brane Anti-Brane Cosmic Superstring G~ 10-6 10-12

  4. Cosmic Superstrings Cosmic superstrings form as a remnant of this decay, and can persist as a cosmological network. The network scales with expansion, roughly, the length of a typical loop is proportional to cosmological time, and the density inversely proportional to T3. There are two main inputs to this picture: string motion and intercommutation, both of which are affected by extra dimensions.

  5. String motion Motion of the string is governed by its effective action, obtained by integrating out over the detailed core structure. This gives the Nambu action: Area of worldsheet Essentially the same action as string theory. The loops have left moving and right moving waves, which can interact in a curved background.

  6. Intercommutation The other key feature of string motion is that strings tend to intercommute, or break off when they self-intersect: This is related to a standard “90º scattering” property of solitons.

  7. Gravitational wave observations Strings are detected by gravitational waves. The string emits characteristic signals from two important events: cusps and kinks. LISA f ~ 4 mHz LIGO f ~ 150 Hz

  8. Cusps and Kinks The string can have a sharp profile for two reasons: • KINKS: occur when a string self-intersects and cuts off; the loop or string has a kink in it. • CUSPS: occur when the left and right moving waves constructively interfere to allow the string to (instantaneously) move at the speed of light.

  9. Linearized gravity In the far field the metric is well approximated by: For a cusp or kink, the Fourier integral is dominated when the momentum aligns with the cusp vector. This gives a characteristic high frequency power law tail, giving a distinct signal. Damour and Vilenkin

  10. Cusp Signal The left and right moving modes each contribute to hmnso when these align, a strong signal is produced – the CUSP • Cusp beams out gravity waves in a tight cone around the cusp vector • Opening angle defined by saddle point of I± Damour-Vilenkin

  11. Kink Signal The discontinuity dominates the integral for the left mover, but the right mover still has the saddle around its wave vector, signal a combination of these. • Kink beams out gravitational waves along the cts wave-vector, localised transverse – a FAN • Opening angle defined by saddle point of I+

  12. Cosmological Signal The expanding universe modifies the signal from an individual cusp/kink Then must estimate the total signal from the network C – number cusps/kinks per loop

  13. DV Ligo result Damour and Vilenkin use analytic approximations to variables, and take a desired event rate of 1 per year. Signal dominated by maximal redshift, use this to obtain amplitude at desired fiducial frequency. Cusps (c=1, 0.1) Ligo AdvLigo kinks Ln a

  14. The effect of extra dims? Extra dimensions reduce the probability of intercommutation, but also the kinematics of strings will be different. The strings can move in the extra dimensions as classical solitons provided their width is sufficiently small. E.o’C, SC, GG, RG, IZ 1003.4395, 1005.3220 [hep-th]

  15. Motion with extra dims: With flat extra dimensions, the picture is similar to 4D, with left and right moving waves, however, the string appears to slow in our noncompact dimensions. This has important consequences for cusps and kinks. With warped extra dimensions, things are more complex, the warping induces coupling between left and right movers, and the width of the string relative to the internal dimension size tells us if the string can sample the extra dimensions.

  16. Warped throat Geometry ds2 = h-1/2 dx2 + h1/2 dy2 throat FRW cosmology Baumann-McAllister L – curvature radius h0~L4/r04 ruv r0~e2/3

  17. String Width This allows an estimate of the string width, w6~w4h-1/2, relative to r0.

  18. Approximate Solutions Expanding eqns around tip shows that motion is close to 4D, and modelling with an exact throat gives estimates of the slowdown of 4D motion. Most importantly, string motion in internal dimensions persists. Can use simple numerical solutions together with analytic approximations to estimate departure from the 4D motion. Avgoustidis, Chadburn, RG 1204.0973

  19. Cusp Rounding The effect of internal velocity is that the wave vectors of 4D left & right movers no longer need be null. This rounds off the cusp, narrowing the beaming cone. NEAR CUSP EVENT

  20. Measure reduction In 3d, cusps are generic, but in higher dimensions the Kibble-Turok sphere allows lines not to cross – have to estimate probability of near cusp event. From cusp constraint, co-dimensionality of solns with exact cusps isn. Test trajectories give N(D) ≈ Dn

  21. Total Effect: General network has range of NCE’s, up to critical Dwhere cone closes off. Must integrate cusp event rate over this range: Can then use interpolating functions, as DV, or calculateDA(z) andH(z)exactly for LCDM.

  22. Caveats All tests with Nambu strings back up this picture, but strings have finite width. This will give more self-intersection as size of extra dims decreases, and possibly restrict parameter space. Model this empirically by changing measure on solution space to peak around 3d. On integration gives new rate dependence on q, D0

  23. With Measure n = 1, n = 3, n = 6 FIX D0=10-3 D0 = 10-4, 10-3,10-2,0.1 FIX n = 3

  24. Kink waveform E.o’C & RG 1010.3942 [hep-th] For the kink, the right mover has a saddle as with the cusp, but the discontinuity contributes from its end points: Kink amplitude for range of discontinuity angles fan Kibble-Turok sphere

  25. Kinks: For the kink, the only factor from extra dimensions is the thinning of the fan to (q-d) which must be integrated over: NB: This is independent of the number of extra dimensions

  26. Plots show amplitudes are suppressed from DV result, but not more than cusp with n=3 If kinks proliferate by more than 6 orders of magnitude, they will be easily detectable.

  27. Rate Plot Perhaps more useful is an event rate plot at h ~ 10-21

  28. Summary • Kinematics of extra dimensions can have a strong effect on the gravitational wave signal • Cusp signal is particularly sensitive to number of extra dimensions • Warped extra dimensions and cosmological expansion seem not to change the qualitative result • Lower frequency bands have less signal differentiation • Kinks offer better bet for detection • Differentiation between cusp/kink signals indicative of number of (eff) extra dimensions.

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