scholarly journals Type IV singular bouncing cosmology from f(T) gravity

2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (11) ◽  
pp. 1950147
Author(s):  
P. H. Logbo ◽  
M. J. S. Houndjo

We investigate bouncing scenario in the modified [Formula: see text] gravity, [Formula: see text] being the torsion scalar. Attention is attached to the reconstruction of [Formula: see text] able to describe type IV singular bouncing evolution, where we adopt as assumption that the bouncing and type IV singularity points coincide. In the context of the reconstructed [Formula: see text] model, we calculate the Hubble slow-roll parameters in order to determine the dynamical evolution of the cosmological system under study. The results show that the Hubble slow-roll parameters become singular at the type IV singularity indicating a dynamical instability. Moreover, we perform the stability analysis of the [Formula: see text] gravity solution where, according to the obtained result, the type IV singularity point is a saddle point in agreement with the bounce scenario.

2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (02) ◽  
pp. 1850009 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. K. Oikonomou

In this work, we investigate how a smooth transition from a constant-roll to a slow-roll inflationary era may be realized in the context of a canonical scalar field theory. We study in some detail the dynamical evolution of the cosmological system, and we investigate whether a stable attractor exists, both numerically and analytically. We also investigate the slow-roll era and as we demonstrate, the partially compatibility of the resulting scalar theory may be achieved with the potential of the latter belonging to a class of modular inflationary potentials. The novel features of the constant-roll to slow-roll transition which we achieved are firstly that it is not compelling for the slow-roll era to last for [Formula: see text]–60 [Formula: see text]-foldings, but it may last for a smaller number of [Formula: see text]-foldings, since some [Formula: see text]-foldings may occur during the constant-roll era. Secondly, when the slow-roll era occurs after the constant-roll era, the graceful exit from inflation may occur, a feature absent in the constant-roll scenario, due to the stability properties of the final attractor in the constant-roll case.


2013 ◽  
Vol 727 ◽  
pp. 407-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. S. Verma ◽  
V. Kumaran

AbstractA dynamical instability is observed in experimental studies on micro-channels of rectangular cross-section with smallest dimension 100 and $160~\mathrm{\mu} \mathrm{m} $ in which one of the walls is made of soft gel. There is a spontaneous transition from an ordered, laminar flow to a chaotic and highly mixed flow state when the Reynolds number increases beyond a critical value. The critical Reynolds number, which decreases as the elasticity modulus of the soft wall is reduced, is as low as 200 for the softest wall used here (in contrast to 1200 for a rigid-walled channel). The instability onset is observed by the breakup of a dye-stream introduced in the centre of the micro-channel, as well as the onset of wall oscillations due to laser scattering from fluorescent beads embedded in the wall of the channel. The mixing time across a channel of width 1.5 mm, measured by dye-stream and outlet conductance experiments, is smaller by a factor of 105 than that for a laminar flow. The increased mixing rate comes at very little cost, because the pressure drop (energy requirement to drive the flow) increases continuously and modestly at transition. The deformed shape is reconstructed numerically, and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations are carried out to obtain the pressure gradient and the velocity fields for different flow rates. The pressure difference across the channel predicted by simulations is in agreement with the experiments (within experimental errors) for flow rates where the dye stream is laminar, but the experimental pressure difference is higher than the simulation prediction after dye-stream breakup. A linear stability analysis is carried out using the parallel-flow approximation, in which the wall is modelled as a neo-Hookean elastic solid, and the simulation results for the mean velocity and pressure gradient from the CFD simulations are used as inputs. The stability analysis accurately predicts the Reynolds number (based on flow rate) at which an instability is observed in the dye stream, and it also predicts that the instability first takes place at the downstream converging section of the channel, and not at the upstream diverging section. The stability analysis also indicates that the destabilization is due to the modification of the flow and the local pressure gradient due to the wall deformation; if we assume a parabolic velocity profile with the pressure gradient given by the plane Poiseuille law, the flow is always found to be stable.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (14) ◽  
pp. 2050195
Author(s):  
M. G. Ganiou ◽  
M. J. S. Houndjo ◽  
H. F. Abadji ◽  
J. Tossa

In this paper, we investigate the effects of Type IV singularity through [Formula: see text] gravity description of inflationary Universe, where [Formula: see text] denotes the torsion scalar. With the Friedmann equations of the theory, we reconstruct a [Formula: see text] model according to a given Hubble rate susceptible to describe the inflationary era near the Type IV singularity. One obtains an interesting well-known [Formula: see text] model but with additional constant parameter [Formula: see text] staying as the Type IV singularity contribution. Moreover, we calculate the Hubble flow parameters in order to determine the dynamical evolution of the cosmological system. The results show that some of the Hubble flow parameters are small near the Type IV singularity and become singular at Type IV singularity, indicating that a dynamical instability of the cosmological system occurs at that point. This means that the dynamical cosmological evolution up to that point ceases to be the final attractor since the system is abruptly interrupted. Furthermore, by considering the [Formula: see text] trace anomaly equation, the previous result on the Type IV singularity is consolidated by the conditional instability coming from the de Sitter inflationary description of the reconstructed [Formula: see text] model. The model leads to instability strongly governed by the Type IV singularity parameter [Formula: see text] is viewed as the graceful exit from inflation. Our theoretical [Formula: see text] description based on slow-roll parameters not only confirms some observational data on spectral index and the scalar-to-tensor ratio from Planck data and BICEP[Formula: see text]/Keck-Array data, but also shows the property of [Formula: see text] gravity in describing the early and late-time evolution of our Universe.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-60
Author(s):  
Simon Heru Prassetyo ◽  
Ganda Marihot Simangunsong ◽  
Ridho Kresna Wattimena ◽  
Made Astawa Rai ◽  
Irwandy Arif ◽  
...  

This paper focuses on the stability analysis of the Nanjung Water Diversion Twin Tunnels using convergence measurement. The Nanjung Tunnel is horseshoe-shaped in cross-section, 10.2 m x 9.2 m in dimension, and 230 m in length. The location of the tunnel is in Curug Jompong, Margaasih Subdistrict, Bandung. Convergence monitoring was done for 144 days between February 18 and July 11, 2019. The results of the convergence measurement were recorded and plotted into the curves of convergence vs. day and convergence vs. distance from tunnel face. From these plots, the continuity of the convergence and the convergence rate in the tunnel roof and wall were then analyzed. The convergence rates from each tunnel were also compared to empirical values to determine the level of tunnel stability. In general, the trend of convergence rate shows that the Nanjung Tunnel is stable without any indication of instability. Although there was a spike in the convergence rate at several STA in the measured span, that spike was not replicated by the convergence rate in the other measured spans and it was not continuous. The stability of the Nanjung Tunnel is also confirmed from the critical strain analysis, in which most of the STA measured have strain magnitudes located below the critical strain line and are less than 1%.


1996 ◽  
Vol 308 ◽  
pp. 31-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi-Hwa Wang ◽  
R. Jackson ◽  
S. Sundaresan

This paper presents a linear stability analysis of a rapidly sheared layer of granular material confined between two parallel solid plates. The form of the steady base-state solution depends on the nature of the interaction between the material and the bounding plates and three cases are considered, in which the boundaries act as sources or sinks of pseudo-thermal energy, or merely confine the material while leaving the velocity profile linear, as in unbounded shear. The stability analysis is conventional, though complicated, and the results are similar in all cases. For given physical properties of the particles and the bounding plates it is found that the condition of marginal stability depends only on the separation between the plates and the mean bulk density of the particulate material contained between them. The system is stable when the thickness of the layer is sufficiently small, but if the thickness is increased it becomes unstable, and initially the fastest growing mode is analogous to modes of the corresponding unbounded problem. However, with a further increase in thickness a new mode becomes dominant and this is of an unusual type, with no analogue in the case of unbounded shear. The growth rate of this mode passes through a maximum at a certain value of the thickness of the sheared layer, at which point it grows much faster than any mode that could be shared with the unbounded problem. The growth rate of the dominant mode also depends on the bulk density of the material, and is greatest when this is neither very large nor very small.


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