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Institution

Lancaster University

EducationLancaster, Lancashire, United Kingdom
About: Lancaster University is a education organization based out in Lancaster, Lancashire, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 13080 authors who have published 44563 publications receiving 1692277 citations. The organization is also known as: The University of Lancaster & Lancaster University.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of chaotic inflation models with two scalar fields, such that one field (the inflaton) rolls while the other is trapped in a false vacuum state, finds that false vacuum inflation occurs with the inflaton field far below the Planck scale, making it easier to implement in the context of supergravity than standard chaotic inflation.
Abstract: We present a detailed investigation of chaotic inflation models which feature two scalar fields such that one field (the inflaton) rolls while the other is trapped in a false vacuum state. The false vacuum becomes unstable when the magnitude of the inflaton field falls below some critical value, and a first or second order transition to the true vacuum ensues. Particular attention is paid to the case termed ``hybrid inflation'' by Linde, where the false vacuum energy density dominates so that the phase transition signals the end of inflation. We focus mostly on the case of a second order transition, but treat also the first order case and discuss bubble production in that context for the first time. False-vacuum-dominated inflation is dramatically different from the usual true vacuum case, both in its cosmology and in its relation to particle physics. The spectral index of the adiabatic density perturbation originating during inflation can be indistinguishable from 1, or it can be up to ten percent or so higher. The energy scale at the end of inflation can be many orders of magnitude less than the value ${10}^{16}$ GeV, which is ususal in the true vacuum case. Reheating occurs promptly at the end of inflation. Cosmic strings or other topological defects are almost inevitably produced at the end of inflation, and if the inflationary energy scale is near its upper limit they contribute significantly to large scale structure formation and the cosmic microwave background anisotropy.Turning to particle physics, false vacuum inflaton occurs with the inflaton field far below the Planck scale and is therefore somewhat easier to implement in the context of supergravity than true vacuum chaotic inflation. The smallness of the inflaton mass compared with the inflationary Hubble parameter still presents a difficulty for generic supergravity theories. Remarkably, however, the difficulty can be avoided in a natural way for a class of supergravity models that follow from orbifold compactification of superstrings. This opens up the prospect of a truly realistic superstring-derived theory of inflation. One possibility, which we show to be viable at least in the context of global supersymmetry, is that the Peccei-Quinn symmetry is responsible for the false vacuum.

1,033 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that changes in species diversity within and across trophic levels can significantly alter decomposition and this happens through various mechanisms that are broadly similar in forest floors and streams.
Abstract: Over 100 gigatons of terrestrial plant biomass are produced globally each year. Ninety percent of this biomass escapes herbivory and enters the dead organic matter pool, thus supporting complex detritus-based food webs that determine the critical balance between carbon mineralization and sequestration. How will changes in biodiversity affect this vital component of ecosystem functioning? Based on our analysis of concepts and experiments of leaf decomposition in forest floors and streams, we suggest that changes in species diversity within and across trophic levels can significantly alter decomposition. This happens through various mechanisms that are broadly similar in forest floors and streams. Differences in diversity effects between these systems relate to divergent habitat conditions and evolutionary trajectories of aquatic and terrestrial decomposers.

1,027 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Brian Wynne1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that shifting the normative principles applied to policy use of science is not merely an external shift in relation to the same body of natural knowledge, but also involves the possible reshaping of the natural knowledge itself.
Abstract: for current assumptions about scientific knowledge and environmental policy raised by the preventive approach and the associated Precautionary Principle. He offers a critical examination of approaches to characterizing different kinds of uncertainty in policy knowledge, especially in relation to decision making upstream from environmental effects. Via the key dimension of unrecognized indeterminacy in scientific knowledge, the author argues that shifting the normative principles applied to policy use of science is not merely an external shift in relation to the same body of ‘natural’ knowledge, but also involves the possible reshaping of the ‘natural’ knowledge itself.

1,013 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper used a range of analysis techniques to present validity evidence and explore the equivalence of two revised and expanded versions of the Vocabulary Levels Test (VLST) for language assessment and vocabulary research.
Abstract: The Vocabulary Levels Test has been widely used in language assessment and vocabulary research despite never having been properly validated. This article reports on a study which uses a range of analysis techniques to present validity evidence, and to explore the equivalence of two revised and expanded versions of the Vocabulary Levels Test.

1,013 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, expressions for flux-pinning in type II superconductors are derived from considerations of the nature of the interaction between individual flux-lines and pinning-centres, and of the geometry of th...
Abstract: Expressions for flux-pinning in type II superconductors are derived from considerations of the nature of the interaction between individual flux-lines and pinning-centres, and of the geometry of th...

1,011 citations


Authors

Showing all 13361 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David Miller2032573204840
H. S. Chen1792401178529
John Hardy1771178171694
Yang Gao1682047146301
Gavin Davies1592036149835
David Tilman158340149473
David Cameron1541586126067
A. Artamonov1501858119791
Steven Williams144137586712
Carmen García139150396925
Milos Lokajicek139151198888
S. R. Hou1391845106563
Roger Jones138998114061
Alan D. Baddeley13746789497
Pavel Shatalov136109791536
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023150
2022467
20212,620
20202,881
20192,593
20182,505