Top Banner
String/Brane Cosmology COSMO 07 – University of Sussex C.P. Burgess
83

String/Brane Cosmology

Jan 01, 2016

Download

Documents

String/Brane Cosmology. COSMO 07 – University of Sussex C.P. Burgess. String/Brane Cosmology. …for those who have not yet drunk the Kool-Aid. with J.Blanco-Pillado, J.Cline, K. das Gupta, C. de Rham, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: String/Brane Cosmology

String/Brane Cosmology

COSMO 07 – University of Sussex

C.P. Burgess

Page 2: String/Brane Cosmology

String/Brane Cosmology

…for those who have not yet

drunk the Kool-Aid

with J.Blanco-Pillado, J.Cline, K. das Gupta, C. de Rham, C.Escoda, M.Gomez-Reino, D. Hoover, R.Kallosh,

A.Linde,F.Quevedo, G. Tasinato and A. Tolley

Page 3: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

On the shoulders of giants

A. Salam, E. Sezgin, H. Nishino,G. Gibbons, S. Kachru E. Silverstein, R. Guven, C. Pope, K. Maeda, M. Sasaki, V. Rubakov, R. Gregory, I. Navarro, J. Santiago, S. Carroll, C. Guica, C. Wetterich, S. Randjbar-Daemi, F. Quevedo, Y. Aghababaie, S. Parameswaran, J. Cline, J. Matias, G. Azuelos, P-H. Beauchemin, A. Albrecht, C. Skordis, F. Ravndal, I. Zavala, G. Tasinato, J. Garriga, M. Porrati, H.P. Nilles, A. Papazoglou, H. Lee, N. Arkani-Hamad, S. Dimopoulos, N. Kaloper, R. Sundrum, D. Hoover, A. Tolley, C. de Rham, S. Forste, Z. Lalak, S. Lavingnac, C. Grojean, C. Csaki, J. Erlich, T. Hollowood, H. Firouzjahi, J. Chen, M. Luty, E. Ponton, P. Callin, D. Ghilencea, E. Copeland, O. Seto, V. Nair, S. Mukhoyama, Y. Sendouda, H. Yoshigushi, S. Kinoshita, A. Salvio, J. Duscheneau, J. Vinet, M. Giovannini, M. Graesser, J. Kile, P. Wang, P. Bostok, G. Kofinas, C. Ludeling, A. Nielsen, B. Carter, D. Wiltshire. C. K. Akama, S. Appleby, F. Arroja, D. Bailin, M. Bouhmadi-Lopez, M. Brook, R. Brown, C. Byrnes, G. Candlish, A. Cardoso, A. Chatterjee, D. Coule, S. Creek, B. Cuadros-Melgar, S. Davis, B. de Carlos, A. de Felice, G. de Risi, C. Deffayet, P. Brax, D. Easson, A. Fabbri, A. Flachi, S. Fujii, L. Gergely, C. Germani, D. Gorbunov, I. Gurwich, T. Hiramatsu, B. Hoyle, K. Izumi, P. Kanti, S. King, T. Kobayashi, K. Koyama, D. Langlois, J. Lidsey, F. Lobo, R. Maartens, N. Mavromatos, A. Mennim, M. Minamitsuji, B. Mistry, S. Mizuno, A. Padilla, S. Pal, G. Palma, L. Papantonopoulos, G. Procopio, M. Roberts, M. Sami, S. Seahra, Y. Sendouda, M. Shaeri, T. Shiromizu, P. Smyth, J. Soda, K. Stelle, Y. Takamizu, T. Tanaka, T. Torii, C. van de Bruck, D. Wands, V. Zamarias, H. Ziaeepour

Page 4: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Outline

• Motivation• String Cosmology: Why Does it Make Sense?

• Branes and ‘late-Universe’ cosmology• Some Dark (Energy) Thoughts

• String inflation• A Sledgehammer for a Nutcracker?

• Outlook

Page 5: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Outline

• Motivation• String Cosmology: Why Does it Make Sense?

• Branes and ‘late-Universe’ cosmology• Some Dark (Energy) Thoughts

• String inflation• A Sledgehammer for a Nutcracker?

• Outlook

Page 6: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Outline

• Motivation• String Cosmology: Why Does it Make Sense?

• Branes and ‘late-Universe’ cosmology• Some Dark (Energy) Thoughts

• String inflation• A Sledgehammer for a Nutcracker?

• Outlook

Page 7: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Outline

• Motivation• String Cosmology: Why Does it Make Sense?

• Branes and ‘late-Universe’ cosmology• Some Dark (Energy) Thoughts

• String inflation• A Sledgehammer for a Nutcracker?

• Outlook

Page 8: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

Page 9: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

Science progresses because short- distance physics decouples from long distances.

Page 10: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

Science progresses because short distance physics decouples from long distances.

* Inflationary fluctuations could well arise at very high energies: MI » 10-3 Mp

Page 11: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

Science progresses because short distance physics decouples from long distances.

* Inflationary fluctuations could well arise at very high energies: MI » 10-3 Mp

* Cosmology (inflation, quintessence, modified gravity, etc) relies on properties which can be extremely sensitive to short distances.

Page 12: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

Science progresses because short distance physics decouples from long distances.

* Inflationary fluctuations could well arise at very high energies: MI » 10-3 Mp

* Cosmology (inflation, quintessence, modified gravity, etc) relies on properties which can be extremely sensitive to short distances.

* String theory suggests important changes in the low-energy degrees of freedom: branes.

Page 13: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

• Why are branes important for cosmology and particle physics?

D branes in string theory are surfaces on which some strings must end, ensuring their low-energy modes are trapped on the brane.

Polchinski

Page 14: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

• Why are branes important for cosmology and particle physics?

In some cases this is where the Standard Model particles live.

Ibanez et al

Page 15: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

• Why are branes important for cosmology and particle physics?

Leads to the brane-world scenario, wherein we are all brane-bound.

Rubakov & Shaposhnikov

Page 16: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Strings, Branes and Cosmology

• Why doesn’t string theory decouple from cosmology?

• Why are branes important for cosmology and particle physics?

Identifies hidden assumptions about low energy theory whose relaxation might help with low energy naturalness problems.

Page 17: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*2 + dimensionless

Page 18: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*2 + dimensionless

M ~ 1011 GeV

Mw102 GeV

Mp ~1018 GeV

20

2 mm

BUT: effective theory can be defined at many scales

Page 19: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*2 + dimensionless

M ~ 1011 GeV

Mw102 GeV

Mp ~1018 GeV

20

2 mm

221

2 Mkmm

BUT: effective theory can be defined at many scales

Page 20: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*2 + dimensionless

M ~ 1011 GeV

Mw102 GeV

Mp ~1018 GeV

20

2 mm

221

2 Mkmm

BUT: effective theory can be defined at many scales

Hierarchy Problem: These must cancel to 20 digits!!

Page 21: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHLSM*2 + dimensionless

Hierarchy problem: Since the largest mass dominates, why isn’t m ~ MGUT or Mp ??

• Three approaches to solve the Hierarchy problem:

Compositeness: H is not fundamental at energies E À Mw

Supersymmetry: there are new particles at E À Mw and a symmetry which ensures cancellations so m2 ~ MB

2 – MF2

Extra Dimensions: the fundamental scale is much smaller than Mp , much as

GF-1/2 > Mw

Page 22: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness in Crisis

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

• The Standard Model’s dirty secret: there are really two unnaturally small terms.

HHmLSM*24 + dimensionless

Page 23: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness in Crisis

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*24 + dimensionless

me ~ 106 eV

m10-2 eV

mw ~1011 eV

m ~ 108 eV

440

4 mk

4441

4 mkmk ee

Can apply same argument to scales between TeV and sub-eV scales.

Cosmological Constant Problem: Must cancel to 32 decimal places!!

Page 24: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness in Crisis

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

• The Standard Model’s dirty secret: there are really two unnaturally small terms.

HHmLSM*24 + dimensionless

Harder than the Hierarchy problem:

Integrating out the electron already gives too large a contribution!!

Page 25: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness in Crisis

• Dark energy vs vacuum energy

• Why must the vacuum energy be large?

me ~ 106 eV

m10-2 eV

mw ~1011 eV

m ~ 108 eV

Seek to change properties of low-energy particles (like the electron) so that their zero-point energy does not gravitate, even though quantum effects do gravitate in atoms!

Why is this seen………………but not this?

Page 26: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness in Crisis

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*24 + dimensionless

Cosmological constant problem: Why is ~ 10-3 eV rather than me , Mw , MGUT or Mp?

• Approaches to solve the Hierarchy problem at ~ 10-2 eV?

Compositeness: graviton is not fundamental at energies E À Supersymmetry: there are new particles at E À and a symmetry which ensures cancellations so 2 ~ MB

2 – MF2

Extra Dimensions: the fundamental scale is much smaller than Mp

Page 27: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Naturalness in Crisis

• Ideas for what lies beyond the Standard Model are largely driven by ‘technical naturalness’.• Motivated by belief that SM is an effective field theory.

HHmLSM*24 + dimensionless

Cosmological constant problem: Why is ~ 10-3 eV rather than me , Mw , MGUT or Mp?

• Approaches to solve the Hierarchy problem at ~ 10-2 eV?

Compositeness: graviton is not fundamental at energies E À Supersymmetry: there are new particles at E À and a symmetry which ensures cancellations so 2 ~ MB

2 – MF2

Extra Dimensions: the fundamental scale is much smaller than Mp

??

Page 28: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

How Extra Dimensions Help

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

Page 29: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

A cosmological constant

TGgG 8

Page 30: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

A cosmological constant is not distinguishable from a Lorentz invariant vacuum energy

vs

gGTGG 488

TGgG 8

Page 31: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

A cosmological constant is not distinguishable* from a Lorentz invariant vacuum energy

vs

gGTGG 488

TGgG 8

* in 4 dimensions…

Page 32: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

In higher dimensions a 4D vacuum energy, if localized in the extra dimensions, can curve the extra dimensions instead of the observed four.

Chen, Luty & PontonArkani-Hamad et al

Kachru et al,Carroll & Guica

Aghababaie, et al

xtT NMMN2

Page 33: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

These scales are natural using standard 4D arguments.

m ~ mw2/Mp

~ 10-2 eV

H ~ m2/Mp

mw

Page 34: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

These scales are natural using standard 4D arguments.

m ~ mw2/Mp

~ 10-2 eV

H ~ m2/Mp

mw Extra dimensions

could start here, if there are only two of them.

Arkani Hamed, Dvali, Dimopoulos

Page 35: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• 4D CC vs 4D vacuum energy

• Branes and scales

How Extra Dimensions Help

Only gravity gets modified over the most dangerous distance scales!

m ~ mw2/Mp

~ 10-2 eV

H ~ m2/Mp

mw Must rethink how the vacuum gravitates in 6D for these scales.

SM interactions do not change at all!

Page 36: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

The SLED Proposal

• Suppose physics is extra-dimensional above the 10-2 eV scale.

• Suppose the physics of the bulk is supersymmetric.

Aghababaie, CB, Parameswaran & Quevedo

Page 37: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

The SLED Proposal

• Suppose physics is extra-dimensional above the 10-2 eV scale.

• Suppose the physics of the bulk is supersymmetric.

• 6D gravity scale: Mg ~ 10 TeV

• KK scale: 1/r ~ 10-2 eV

• Planck scale: Mp ~ Mg2 r

Arkani-Hamad, Dimopoulos & Dvali

Page 38: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• Suppose physics is extra-dimensional above the 10-2 eV scale.

• Suppose the physics of the bulk is supersymmetric.

The SLED Proposal

• 6D gravity scale: Mg ~ 10 TeV

• KK scale: 1/r ~ 10-2 eV

• Planck scale: Mp ~ Mg2 r

• Choose bulk to be supersymmetric(no 6D CC allowed)

Nishino & Sezgin

Page 39: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• Suppose physics is extra-dimensional above the 10-2 eV scale.

• Suppose the physics of the bulk is supersymmetric.

The SLED Proposal

• 6D gravity scale: Mg ~ 10 TeV

• KK scale: 1/r ~ 10-2 eV

• Planck scale: Mp ~ Mg2 r

• SUSY Breaking on brane: TeVin bulk: Mg

2/Mp ~1/r

Page 40: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

The SLED Proposal

4D graviton

m ~ Mw2/Mp

H ~ m2/Mp

Mw

Particle Spectrum:

4D scalar: e r2 ~ const

SM on brane – no partners

Many KK modes in bulk

Page 41: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

What Needs Understanding

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

Page 42: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

What Needs Understanding

• Search for solutions to 6D supergravity: • What bulk geometry arises from a given

brane configuration?

• What is special about the ones which are 4D flat?

Page 43: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

What Needs Understanding

• Search for solutions to 6D supergravity: • What bulk geometry arises from a given

brane configuration?

• What is special about the ones which are 4D flat?

• Bulk solutions known for most properties for 2 brane sources;

• Most have runaway behaviour, with extra dimensions growing or collapsing

• Sufficient condition for flatness is absence of brane-dilaton coupling.

Page 44: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

What Needs Understanding

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

Page 45: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

What Needs Understanding

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

• When both branes have conical singularities all static solutions have 4D minkowski geometry.

• Conical singularities require vanishing dilaton coupling to branes (and hence scale invariant)

Page 46: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

What Needs Understanding

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

• When both branes have conical singularities all static solutions have 4D minkowski geometry.

• Conical singularities require vanishing dilaton coupling to branes (and hence scale invariant)

• Brane loops on their own cannot generate dilaton couplings from scratch.

Page 47: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

What Needs Understanding

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

• When both branes have conical singularities all static solutions have 4D minkowski geometry.

• Conical singularities require vanishing dilaton coupling to branes (and hence scale invariant)

• Brane loops on their own cannot generate dilaton couplings from scratch.

• Bulk loops can generate brane-dilaton coupling but TeV scale modes are suppressed at one loop by 6D supersymmetry

Page 48: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

What Needs Understanding

• Classical part of the argument:• What choices must be

made to ensure 4D flatness?

• Quantum part of the argument:• Are these choices stable

against renormalization?

• When both branes have conical singularities all static solutions have 4D minkowski geometry.

• Conical singularities require vanishing dilaton coupling to branes (and hence scale invariant)

• Brane loops on their own cannot generate dilaton couplings from scratch.

• Bulk loops can generate brane-dilaton coupling but TeV scale modes are suppressed at one loop by 6D supersymmetry

• Each bulk loop costs power of e ~ 1/r2 and so only a few loops must be checked…..

Page 49: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Observational Consequences

• Quintessence cosmology

• Modifications to gravity

• Collider physics

• Neutrino physics?

• And more!

SUSY broken at

the TeV scale,

but not the MSSM!

Page 50: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Summary

• It is too early to abandon naturalness as a fundamental criterion!

Page 51: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Summary

• It is too early to abandon naturalness as a fundamental criterion!

• It is the interplay between cosmological phenomenology and microscopic constraints which will make it possible to solve the Dark Energy problem.• Technical naturalness provides a crucial clue.

Page 52: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Summary

• It is too early to abandon naturalness as a fundamental criterion!

• It is the interplay between cosmological phenomenology and microscopic constraints which will make it possible to solve the Dark Energy problem.• Technical naturalness provides a crucial clue.

• 6D brane-worlds allow progress on technical naturalness:• Vacuum energy not equivalent to curved 4D

• Are ‘Flat’ choices stable against renormalization?

Page 53: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Summary

• It is too early to abandon naturalness as a fundamental criterion!

• It is the interplay between cosmological phenomenology and microscopic constraints which will make it possible to solve the Dark Energy problem.• Technical naturalness provides a crucial clue.

• 6D brane-worlds allow progress on technical naturalness:• Vacuum energy not equivalent to curved 4D

• Are ‘Flat’ choices stable against renormalization?

• Tuned initial conditions• Much like for the Hot Big Bang Model.

Page 54: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Summary

• It is too early to abandon naturalness as a fundamental criterion!

• It is the interplay between cosmological phenomenology and microscopic constraints which will make it possible to solve the Dark Energy problem.• Technical naturalness provides a crucial clue.

• 6D brane-worlds allow progress on technical naturalness:• Vacuum energy not equivalent to curved 4D

• Are ‘Flat’ choices stable against renormalization?

• Tuned initial conditions• Much like for the Hot Big Bang Model.

• Enormously predictive, with many observational consequences.• Cosmology at Colliders! Tests of gravity…

Page 55: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Page 56: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Inflationary models must be embedded into a fundamental theory in order to explain:

Page 57: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Inflationary models must be embedded into a fundamental theory in order to explain:

* Why the inflaton potential has its particular finely-tuned shape

(and if anthropically explained, what assigns the probabilities?)

Page 58: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Inflationary models must be embedded into a fundamental theory in order to explain:

* Why the inflaton potential has its particular finely-tuned shape

(and if anthropically explained, what assigns the probabilities?)

* What explains any special choices for initial conditions

Page 59: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Inflationary models must be embedded into a fundamental theory in order to explain:

* Why the inflaton potential has its particular finely-tuned shape

(and if anthropically explained, what assigns the probabilities?)

* What explains any special choices for initial conditions

* Why the observed particles get heated once inflation ends.

Page 60: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Inflationary models must be embedded into a fundamental theory in order to explain:

* Why the inflaton potential has its particular finely-tuned shape

(and if anthropically explained, what assigns the probabilities?)

* What explains any special choices for initial conditions

* Why the observed particles get heated once inflation ends.

Can identify how robust inflationary predictions are to high-energy details, and so also what kinds of very high-energy physics might be detectable using CMB measurements.

Page 61: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

String theory has many scalars having very flat potentials.

These scalars (called moduli) describe the shape and size of the various extra dimensions

Page 62: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

String theory has many scalars having very flat potentials.

BUT their potentials are usually very difficult to calculate.

Page 63: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

String theory has many scalars having very flat potentials.

BUT their potentials are usually very difficult to calculate.

A convincing case for inflation requires knowing the potential for all of the scalars.

Page 64: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

String theory has many scalars having very flat potentials.

BUT their potentials are usually very difficult to calculate.

A convincing case for inflation requires knowing the potential for all of the scalars.

Page 65: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

For Type IIB strings it is now known how to compute the potentials for some of the low-energy string scalars.

GKP

Page 66: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Branes want to squeeze extra dimensions while the fluxes they source want the extra dimensions to grow. The competition stabilizes many of the ‘moduli’

Page 67: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned? The moduli which remain after

this stabilization can also acquire a potential due to nonperturbative effects. Plausibly estimated…KKLT models

KKLT, KKLMMT

Page 68: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned? The moduli which remain after

this stabilization can also acquire a potential due to nonperturbative effects. Improved for P4[11169]

‘The Better Racetrack’Douglas & Denef

Page 69: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned? The inflaton in these models can

describe the relative positions of branes; or the volume or shape of the extra dimensions.

Page 70: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

The motion of several complex fields must generically be followed through a complicated landscape: many possible trajectories for each vacuum

Page 71: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned? The potential can inflate, e.g. for

some choices for the properties of P4[11169] – giving rise to realistic inflationary fluctuations

The ‘Racetrack Eight’

Page 72: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

CMB measurements begin to distinguish different inflationary models

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

Barger et al hep-ph/0302150

- model comparisons

Page 73: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

CMB measurements begin to distinguish different inflationary models

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

WMAP preferred

- model comparisons

Page 74: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Trajectories through string landscape predict same regions as do their low-energy effective theories.

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

brane-antibrane

racetrack

- model comparisons

Page 75: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

The measurements can already distinguish amongst some stringy inflationary models.

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

KKLMMT*

P4[11169]

WMAP preferred

- model comparisons

KKLMMT, BCSQ, Racetrack 8

Page 76: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Most inflationary trajectories require fine tuning as do their field theory counterparts…

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

- model comparisons

- naturalness

KKLMMT, BCSQ, Racetrack 8

Page 77: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Two possible exceptions:

DBI Inflation: relativistic brane motion where H changes slowly.

Kahler moduli inflation: slow roll from ‘generic’ approximations.

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

- model comparisons

- naturalness

Silverstein & TongBCSQ, Conlon & Quevedo

nn MbMBAV )/(exp)/(

srM M 1,

Page 78: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Although robust against most stringy details, predictions for CMB can be sensitive to specific kinds of physics near horizon exit

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

H-1(t) (t)

Inflation Post-Inflation

Length

Time

p

oscillations 60 e-foldings

10-30 e-foldings

- model comparisons

- naturalness

- robustness

Page 79: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Although robust against most stringy details, predictions for CMB can be sensitive to specific kinds of physics near horizon exit

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

- model comparisons

- naturalness

- robustness

Page 80: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Although robust against most stringy details, predictions for CMB can be sensitive to specific kinds of physics near horizon exit

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

- model comparisons

- naturalness

- robustness

Page 81: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

String Inflation

Although robust against most stringy details, predictions for CMB can be sensitive to specific kinds of physics near horizon exit

• Why try to embed inflation into string theory?

• Why is it hard?

• What have we learned?

- model comparisons

- naturalness

- robustness

Page 82: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

Outlook

• Branes continue to provide a useful approach for naturalness problems.• Dark Energy, Hierarchy Problem, Inflation… more?

• We are very close to finding inflation in explicit controlled string calculations• Possible progress on fine-tunings;

• New insights on reheating (eg cosmic strings);

• Signals largely robust, except near horizon exit

• Small tensor perturbations?

• Possibly even more novel physics can arise!

Page 83: String/Brane Cosmology

Cosmo 07

fin