scholarly journals COSMOLOGICAL CONSTANT, GENERATION OF DIMENSIONS AND THE EFFECTS OF ANISOTROPY IN MULTIDIMENSIONAL SPACETIME

2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (15) ◽  
pp. 1250088
Author(s):  
SERGEY V. YAKOVLEV

In the paper, multidimensional anisotropic metric and density of vacuum energy in the Kasner's model are investigated. It is shown that the presence of scalar field in model is equivalent to metric in the spacetime with additional dimensions and we propose the idea of generating additional dimensions by massless scalar field. We propose a method of renormalization of metric that describes conversion from spacetime with scalar field to higher-dimensional spacetime. We obtain the expression for cosmological constant which depends on the initial conditions for anisotropic metric coefficients. Using the method of Bogolubov, we investigate the influence of anisotropic metric onto the cosmological birth of particles and obtain the effective mass of scalar field depending on the cosmological constant.

Mathematics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 186
Author(s):  
Mercedes Martín-Benito ◽  
Rita B. Neves

We provide an analytical solution to the quantum dynamics of a flat Friedmann-Lemaître- Robertson-Walker model with a massless scalar field in the presence of a small and positive cosmological constant, in the context of Loop Quantum Cosmology. We use a perturbative treatment with respect to the model without a cosmological constant, which is exactly solvable. Our solution is approximate, but it is precisely valid at the high curvature regime where quantum gravity corrections are important. We compute explicitly the evolution of the expectation value of the volume. For semiclassical states characterized by a Gaussian spectral profile, the introduction of a positive cosmological constant displaces the bounce of the solvable model to lower volumes and to higher values of the scalar field. These displacements are state dependent, and in particular, they depend on the peak of the Gaussian profile, which measures the momentum of the scalar field. Moreover, for those semiclassical states, the bounce remains symmetric, as in the vanishing cosmological constant case. However, we show that the behavior of the volume is more intricate for generic states, leading in general to a non-symmetric bounce.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (05) ◽  
pp. 1350026 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. GHANEH ◽  
F. DARABI ◽  
H. MOTAVALLI

We revisit the issue of continuous signature transition from Euclidean to Lorentzian metrics in a cosmological model described by Friedmann–Robertson–Walker (FRW) metric minimally coupled with a self-interacting massive scalar field. Then, using a noncommutative (NC) phase space of dynamical variables deformed by generalized uncertainty principle (GUP), we show that the signature transition occurs even for a model described by the FRW metric minimally coupled with a free massless scalar field accompanied by a cosmological constant. This indicates that the continuous signature transition might have been easily occurred at early universe just by a free massless scalar field, a cosmological constant and a NC phase space deformed by GUP, without resorting to a massive scalar field having an ad hoc complicate potential. We also study the quantum cosmology of the model and obtain a solution of Wheeler–DeWitt (WD) equation which shows a good correspondence with the classical path.


2006 ◽  
Vol 15 (04) ◽  
pp. 545-557 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. CHAN ◽  
M. F. A. DA SILVA ◽  
JAIME F. VILLAS DA ROCHA

The (2+1)-dimensional geodesic circularly symmetric solutions of Einstein-massless-scalar field equations with negative cosmological constant are found and their local and global properties are studied. It is found that one of them represents gravitational collapse where black holes are always formed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (22n23) ◽  
pp. 1340020 ◽  
Author(s):  
MACIEJ MALIBORSKI ◽  
ANDRZEJ ROSTWOROWSKI

In these lecture notes, we discuss recently conjectured instability of anti-de Sitter space, resulting in gravitational collapse of a large class of arbitrarily small initial perturbations. We uncover the technical details used in the numerical study of spherically symmetric Einstein-massless scalar field system with negative cosmological constant that led to the conjectured instability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (02n03) ◽  
pp. 2040030
Author(s):  
Yuri V. Grats ◽  
Pavel Spirin

We consider the gravity-induced effects associated with a massless scalar field living in a higher-dimensional spacetime being the tensor product of Minkowski space and spherically-symmetric space with angle deficit. These spacetimes are considered as simple models for a multidimensional global monopole or cosmic string with flat extra dimensions, where the deficit of solid angle is proportional to Newton constant and tension. Thus, we refer to them as conical backgrounds. In terms of the angular deficit value, we derive the perturbative expression for the scalar Green’s function and compute it to the leading order. With the use of this Green’s function we compute the renormalized vacuum expectation value of the scalar-field’s energy-momentum tensor. We make some general note on the linear-on-curvature part of the trace of even coefficients of Schwinger-deWitt expansion.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (09) ◽  
pp. 1641018 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. B. Bezerra ◽  
H. F. Mota ◽  
C. R. Muniz

We consider the Casimir effect, by calculating the Casimir energy and its corrections for nonzero temperatures, of a massless scalar field in the spacetime with topology [Formula: see text] (Einstein universe) containing an idealized cosmic string. The obtained results confirm the role played by the identifications imposed on the quantum field by boundary conditions arising from the topology of the gravitational field under consideration and illustrate a realization of a gravitational analogue of the Casimir effect. In this backgorund, we show that the vacuum energy can be written as a term which corresponds to the vacuum energy of the massless scalar field in the Einstein universe added by another term that formally corresponds to the vacuum energy of the electromagnetic field in the Einstein universe, multiplied by a parameter associated with the presence of the cosmic string, namely, [Formula: see text], where [Formula: see text] is a constant related to the cosmic string tension, [Formula: see text].


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (30) ◽  
pp. 1550152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ariel Edery ◽  
Yu Nakayama

Recently, it has been pointed out that dimensionless actions in four-dimensional curved spacetime possess a symmetry which goes beyond scale invariance but is smaller than full Weyl invariance. This symmetry was dubbed restricted Weyl invariance. We show that starting with a restricted Weyl invariant action that includes a Higgs sector with no explicit mass, one can generate the Einstein–Hilbert action with cosmological constant and a Higgs mass. The model also contains an extra massless scalar field which couples to the Higgs field (and gravity). If the coupling of this extra scalar field to the Higgs field is negligibly small, this fixes the coefficient of the nonminimal coupling [Formula: see text] between the Higgs field and gravity. Besides the Higgs sector, all the other fields of the Standard Model can be incorporated into the original restricted Weyl invariant action.


2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (03) ◽  
pp. 213-225
Author(s):  
YI LING

Recently Gambini and Pullin proposed a new consistent discrete approach to quantum gravity and applied it to cosmological models. One remarkable result of this approach is that the cosmological singularity can be avoided in a general fashion. However, whether the continuum limit of such discretized theories exists is model dependent. In the case of massless scalar field coupled to gravity with Λ=0, the continuum limit can only be achieved by fine tuning the recurrence constant. We regard this failure as the implication that cosmological constant should vary with time. For this reason we replace the massless scalar field by Chaplygin gas which may contribute an effective cosmological constant term with the evolution of the universe. It turns out that the continuum limit can indeed be reached in this case.


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