Radio and PodcastRadio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions artwork
Education

Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions

Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 05/05 by Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

Apr 20, 20160Education

In this thesis, we investigate the gravitational consequences of theories in which the four spacetime dimensions of our universe are augmented by two spatial extra dimensions. More specifically, the focus is on braneworl...

About This Episode

Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions is an episode from Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 05/05 by Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. In this thesis, we investigate the gravitational c...

Listen Online

Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.

Episode Details

Published Apr 20, 2016, 0 long, audio available.

Questions About This Episode

What is Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions about?

In this thesis, we investigate the gravitational consequences of theories in which the four spacetime dimensions of our universe are augmented by two spatial extra dimensions. More specifically, the focus is on braneworld scenarios, where our world is confined on a hypersurface in the higher-dimensional bulk, allowing the extra dimensions to be large or even infinite. Our main motivation for studying such models is that they could in principle be able to solve the cosmological constant (CC) problem via degravitation: the CC only curves the extra space, leaving the brane geometry flat. A major difference to the simpler case of a codimension-one brane is that here, gravitational waves can be emitted into the bulk, even at the 3D homogeneous and isotropic level, as is relevant for cosmology. Therefore, we first analyze the question how an outgoing wave boundary condition can be implemented, which is necessary in order to obtain a closed set of modified Friedmann equations predicting the cosmological on-brane evolution. We find that a potential tool from the literature, provided by a certain decomposition of the Weyl tensor - while being applicable to plane gravitational waves - fails for cylindrical waves. This failure is related to the fact that it is already impossible to locally separate incoming from outgoing linear cylindrical waves (on flat spacetime), as we demonstrate by explicitly deriving the corresponding nonreflecting boundary condition, which is nonlocal in time. We then consider a generalization of the Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati (DGP) model, containing an additional compact on-brane dimension on top of the one infinite codimension. Since here the 3D maximally symmetric brane emits plane waves, the Weyl tensor criterion can be used to exclude incoming bulk waves, and we derive the resulting Friedmann equations. If the compact dimension is stabilized, DGP cosmology is recovered, but we find indications that the stabilization should break down when the CC starts to dominate, which would lead to additional, potentially interesting late time modifications. If, on the other hand, the compact direction is allowed to expand freely, there are dynamically degravitating solutions - which, however, lack a 4D regime and are thus ruled out, as we demonstrate by fitting to supernova data. Next, we turn to the codimension-two version of the DGP model. By numerically solving the full nonlinear coupled bulk-brane system for cosmological symmetries on the (regularized) brane, we show that in some region of parameter space, a CC - but also any other fluid component - gets degravitated dynamically, and a static geometry is approached via the emission of Einstein-Rosen waves. For other model parameters, pathological super-accelerating solutions are encountered. The origin of this unstable behavior is traced back to a tachyonic ghost mode which is identified in this parameter region by studying linear metric perturbations around a nontrivial pure tension background. While confirming the ghost result on Minkowski from the literature, we gain the important insight that the ghost disappears if the brane tension is large enough, thereby reconciling the model with the physical expectation of a healthy low energy effective theory. Unfortunately, the healthy region is again incompatible with an appropriate 4D gravity regime, and therefore ruled out phenomenologically. The preceding analysis only covered sub-critical brane tensions, meaning that the deficit angle of the exterior conical geometry is less than 2π. In the following chapter, we investigate super-critical tensions (first in 4D), and find that the (regularized) static solution is no longer stable. Instead, the axial direction expands at an asymptotically constant rate, and the exterior geometry (which is necessarily compact) takes the form of a growing cigar. We are able to derive an analytic relation between the expansion rate and the tension, which - when adapted to the 6D setup - only yields a (small) constant shift in the CC, and can therefore not help with the CC problem. Finally, the case of two finite codimensions is analyzed within the model of supersymmetric large extra dimensions (SLED). First, we show that - contrary to recent claims in the literature - a brane-localized flux cannot help avoiding the fine-tuning (which is here imposed by flux quantization) in order to obtain 4D flat solutions, basically because only scale invariant brane couplings ensure a flat brane. Next, we ask if a more realistic model with a finite brane width and scale invariance breaking couplings could still be successful by predicting a small enough (albeit nonzero) 4D curvature, but find a negative answer: If the extra-dimensional volume is within its currently allowed range, both effects give way too large contributions to the curvature, unless the brane width were many orders of magnitude below the bulk Planck length, and again some sort of fine-tuning were invoked.

Where can I listen to Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions?

You can listen to Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.

Which podcast is Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions from?

Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions is an episode from Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 05/05 by Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 0 long.

When was this episode published?

This episode was published on Apr 20, 2016.

Can I save Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions for later?

Yes. Use the heart button on the episode page to add it to your favorite episodes list.

Are there related episodes from Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 05/05?

Yes. This page shows related episodes from Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 05/05 when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.

Quick Answers About This Episode

Where can I listen to Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions?

You can listen to Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Modified gravity and cosmology with two extra dimensions is from Fakultät für Physik - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 05/05 by Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.

What are the episode details?

Published Apr 20, 2016 and 0 long