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Showing papers by "Joan Sola published in 2013"


Journal ArticleDOI
06 Jun 2013
TL;DR: The cosmological constant (CC) problem as mentioned in this paper was first associated to the idea of vacuum energy density, and it is well known that there is a huge discrepancy between the theoretical prediction and the observed value picked from the modern cosmology data.
Abstract: The cosmological constant (CC) term in Einstein's equations, Λ, was first associated to the idea of vacuum energy density. Notwithstanding, it is well-known that there is a huge, in fact appalling, discrepancy between the theoretical prediction and the observed value picked from the modern cosmological data. This is the famous, and extremely difficult, "CC problem". Paradoxically, the recent observation at the CERN Large Hadron Collider of a Higgs-like particle, should actually be considered ambivalent: on the one hand it appears as a likely great triumph of particle physics, but on the other hand it wide opens Pandora's box of the cosmological uproar, for it may provide (alas!) the experimental certification of the existence of the electroweak (EW) vacuum energy, and thus of the intriguing reality of the CC problem. Even if only counting on this contribution to the inventory of vacuum energies in the universe, the discrepancy with the cosmologically observed value is already of 55 orders of magnitude. This is the (hitherto) "real" magnitude of the CC problem, rather than the (too often) brandished 123 ones from the upper (but fully unexplored!) ultrahigh energy scales. Such is the baffling situation after 96 years of introducing the Λ-term by Einstein. In the following I will briefly (and hopefully pedagogically) fly over some of the old and new ideas on the CC problem. Since, however, the Higgs boson just knocked our door and recalled us that the vacuum energy may be a fully tangible concept in real phenomenology, I will exclusively address the CC problem from the original notion of vacuum energy, and its possible "running" with the expansion of the universe, rather than venturing into the numberless attempts to replace the CC by the multifarious concept of dark energy.

309 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a cosmological scenario with the space-time emerging from a pure initial de Sitter stage and subsequently evolving into the radiation, matter and dark energy dominated epochs was proposed.
Abstract: We propose a novel cosmological scenario with the space-time emerging from a pure initial de Sitter stage and subsequently evolving into the radiation, matter and dark energy dominated epochs, thereby avoiding the initial singularity and providing a complete description of the expansion history and a natural solution to the horizon problem. The model is based on a dynamical vacuum energy density which evolves as a power series of the Hubble rate. The transit from the inflation into the standard radiation epoch is universal, giving a clue for a successful description of the graceful exit. Since the resulting late time

165 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose an alternative solution for the cosmological constant and coincidence puzzles based on a large class of time-dependent vacuum energy density models in the form of power series of the Hubble rate.
Abstract: In the present mainstream cosmology, matter and spacetime emerged from a singularity and evolved through four distinct periods: early inflation, radiation, dark matter and late-time inflation (driven by dark energy). During the radiation and dark matter dominated stages, the universe is decelerating while the early and late-time inflations are accelerating stages. A possible connection between the accelerating periods remains unknown, and, even more intriguing, the best dark energy candidate powering the present accelerating stage (�-vacuum) is plagued with the cosmological constant and coincidence puzzles. Here we propose an alternative solution for such problems based on a large class of time-dependent vacuum energy density models in the form of power series of the Hubble rate, � = �(H). The proposed class of �(H)-decaying vacuum model provides: i) a new mechanism for inflation (different from the usual inflaton models), (ii) a natural mechanism for a graceful exit, which is universal for the whole class of models; iii) the currently accelerated expansion of the universe, iv) a mild dynamical dark energy at present; and v) a final de Sitter stage. Remarkably, the late-time cosmic expansion history of our class of models is very close to the

146 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new class of cosmologies capable of overcoming, or highly alleviating, some of these acute cosmic puzzles is proposed, powered by a decaying vacuum energy density, the spacetime emerges from a pure nonsingular de Sitter vacuum stage, "gracefully" exits from inflation to a radiation phase followed by dark matter and vacuum regimes.
Abstract: After decades of successful hot big-bang paradigm, cosmology still lacks a framework in which the early inflationary phase of the universe smoothly matches the radiation epoch and evolves to the present "quasi" de Sitter spacetime. No less intriguing is that the current value of the effective vacuum energy density is vastly smaller than the value that triggered inflation. In this paper, we propose a new class of cosmologies capable of overcoming, or highly alleviating, some of these acute cosmic puzzles. Powered by a decaying vacuum energy density, the spacetime emerges from a pure nonsingular de Sitter vacuum stage, "gracefully" exits from inflation to a radiation phase followed by dark matter and vacuum regimes, and, finally, evolves to a late-time de Sitter phase.

59 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The cosmological constant (CC) problem as discussed by the authors was first associated to the idea of vacuum energy density, and it is well known that there is a huge, in fact appalling, discrepancy between the theoretical prediction and the observed value.
Abstract: The cosmological constant (CC) term in Einstein's equations, Lambda, was first associated to the idea of vacuum energy density. Notwithstanding, it is well-known that there is a huge, in fact appalling, discrepancy between the theoretical prediction and the observed value picked from the modern cosmological data. This is the famous, and extremely difficult, "CC problem". Paradoxically, the recent observation at the CERN Large Hadron Collider of a Higgs-like particle, should actually be considered ambivalent: on the one hand it appears as a likely great triumph of particle physics, but on the other hand it wide opens Pandora's box of the cosmological uproar, for it may provide (alas!) the experimental certification of the existence of the electroweak (EW) vacuum energy, and thus of the intriguing reality of the CC problem. Even if only counting on this contribution to the inventory of vacuum energies in the universe, the discrepancy with the cosmologically observed value is already of 55 orders of magnitude. This is the (hitherto) "real" magnitude of the CC problem, rather than the (too often) brandished 123 ones from the upper (but fully unexplored!) ultrahigh energy scales. Such is the baffling situation after 96 years of introducing the Lambda-term by Einstein. In the following I will briefly (and hopefully pedagogically) fly over some of the old and new ideas on the CC problem. Since, however, the Higgs boson just knocked our door and recalled us that the vacuum energy may be a fully tangible concept in real phenomenology, I will exclusively address the CC problem from the original notion of vacuum energy, and its possible "running" with the expansion of the universe, rather than venturing into the numberless attempts to replace the CC by the multifarious concept of dark energy.

34 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a complete quantitative study of Δr in the framework of the general Two-Higgs-Doublet Model (2HDM) and devised a set of effective couplings that capture the dominant higher order genuine 2HDM quantum effects on the δρ part of Δρ in the limit of large Higgs boson self-interactions.
Abstract: After the recent discovery of a Higgs-like boson particle at the CERN LHC-collider, it becomes more necessary than ever to prepare ourselves for identifying its standard or non-standard nature. The fundamental parameter Δr, relating the values of the electroweak gauge boson masses and the Fermi constant, is the traditional observable encoding high precision information of the quantum effects. In this work we present a complete quantitative study of Δr in the framework of the general Two-Higgs-Doublet Model (2HDM). While the one-loop analysis of Δr in this model was carried out long ago, in the first part of our work we consistently incorporate the higher order effects that have been computed since then for the SM part of Δr. Within the on-shell scheme, we find typical corrections leading to shifts of ∼20–40 MeV on the W mass, resulting in a better agreement with its experimentally measured value and in a degree no less significant than in the MSSM case. In the second part of our study we devise a set of effective couplings that capture the dominant higher order genuine 2HDM quantum effects on the δρ part of Δr in the limit of large Higgs boson self-interactions. This limit constitutes a telltale property of the general 2HDM which is unmatched by e.g. the MSSM.

33 citations


DOI
M. Shaposhnikov, F. Le Diberder, D. Lopex-Val, Keisuke Fujii, M. Boronat, V. Kovalenko, J.F. Gunion, N. Paver, J. E. Brau, James D. Wells, Ivor Fleck, Florian Staub, J. Tian, T. Mori, A. V. Tsytrinov, Rohini M. Godbole, L.I. Malysheva, J. Rouene, S. Groote, Werner Porod, S. Kawada, A. A. Pankov, H. Spiesberger, M. Arana-Catania, Andriy Ushakov, Nicholas Walker, Luca Fiorini, S. Yamashita, A. Rosca, Francois Richard, Marcel Vos, H. Rzehak, R. Pöschl, T. Takahashi, T. Laštovička, Tomohiko Tanabe, V. V. Andreev, Jamie Tattersall, S. Penaranda, J. Kalinowski, Michael Rauch, Christian Speckner, J.G. Körner, F. Bezrukov, Ben O'Leary, W. Liu, Peter Schade, M.Y. Kalmykov, J. F. Strube, Georg Weiglein, P. Ruiz-Femenia, Hiroaki Ono, Christian Grefe, I. Garcia, M. Terwort, Sabine Riemann, B. Kniehl, M. Muhlleitner, Amjad, Benno List, M. Tesar, N. K. Watson, H. Weerts, K. Buesser, C. Schappacher, Per Osland, M. Beneke, M. A. Thomson, Jenny List, C. Calancha, Thorsten Ohl, B. Melic, O. Kittel, Hitoshi Yamamoto, Frank Simon, Anthony Hartin, D. Stöckinger, Howard Baer, T. Frisson, Sabine Kraml, K. Seidel, Gideon Alexander, E. Ros, T. Price, R. Katayama, S. Heinemeyer, Krzysztof Rolbiecki, Werner Bernreuther, O.S. Adeyemi, Victoria Jane Martin, T. Suchara, Jan Heisig, A. Rodriguez-Sanchez, E. Avetisyan, Joan Sola, W. Gai, M.J. Herrero, Christoph Englert, S. Prelovsek, S. Matsumoto, R. Grober, Kian Salimkhani, Kiyotomo Kawagoe, J. Trenado, F. Staufenbiel, S. Berge, B. Jantzen, F.v.d. Pahlen, I.B. Mordechai, A. Bharucha, J. Reuter 
01 Jan 2013

3 citations