Cosmological Time

2020 ◽  
pp. 91-108
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Aleksander Stachowski ◽  
Marek Szydłowski ◽  
Krzysztof Urbanowski

We consider a cosmology with decaying metastable dark energy and assume that a decay process of this metastable dark energy is a quantum decay process. Such an assumption implies among others that the evolution of the Universe is irreversible and violates the time reversal symmetry. We show that if we replace the cosmological time t appearing in the equation describing the evolution of the Universe by the Hubble cosmological scale time, then we obtain time dependent Λ(t) in the form of the series of even powers of the Hubble parameter H: Λ(t)=Λ(H). Our special attention is focused on radioactive-like exponential form of the decay process of the dark energy and on the consequences of this type decay.


1986 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 439-445
Author(s):  
E.J. Wampler ◽  
D. Ponz

Systematic biases that are redshift dependent can influence the optical discovery of quasars and the evolution laws derived from counts of quasars. New data and their interpretation for quasars brighter than MB = −24 in the Palomar Bright Quasar Survey (BQS) (Schmidt and Green, 1983) are consistent with no evolution. A comparison of BQS quasars with the brightest quasars from the CTIO Schmidt Telescope Survey (Osmer and Smith, 1980) shows that if qo is near zero, the co-moving density of bright quasars in a Friedmann cosmology is about 15 times higher for the CTIO survey quasars (mean z ≈ 2.8) than for the BQS quasars (mean z ≈ 1.8). In this case spectral evolution is also required since the CTIO quasars have stronger CIV λ1548 lines than the BQS quasars of similar luminosity. Alternatively, if qO is taken to be near 1, the CTIO survey quasars would then have lower luminosity than the BQS quasars and these data would be consistent with no evolution. Strong CIV λ1548 lines for the CTIO quasars would then fit the general correlation between absolute quasar luminosity and emission line strength (Wampler, Gaskell, Burke and Baldwin, 1984).


2019 ◽  
Vol 488 (1) ◽  
pp. L119-L122 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Wittkowski ◽  
Karl-Heinz Kampert

ABSTRACT Cosmogenic neutrinos originate from interactions of cosmic rays propagating through the universe with cosmic background photons. Since both high-energy cosmic rays and cosmic background photons exist, the existence of high-energy cosmogenic neutrinos is certain. However, their flux has not been measured so far. Therefore, we calculated the flux of high-energy cosmogenic neutrinos arriving at the Earth on the basis of elaborate 4D simulations that take into account three spatial degrees of freedom and the cosmological time-evolution of the universe. Our predictions for this neutrino flux are consistent with the recent upper limits obtained from large-scale cosmic-ray experiments. We also show that the extragalactic magnetic field has a strong influence on the neutrino flux. The results of this work are important for the design of future neutrino observatories, since they allow to assess the detector volume and observation time that are necessary to detect high-energy cosmogenic neutrinos in the near future. An observation of such neutrinos would push multimessenger astronomy to hitherto unachieved energy scales.


2016 ◽  
Vol 31 (19) ◽  
pp. 1650111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Addazi ◽  
Maxim Yu Khlopov

We discuss the gravitino problem in the context of the exotic see-saw mechanism for neutrinos and leptogenesis, UV completed by intersecting D-branes Pati–Salam models. In the exotic see-saw model, supersymmetry is broken at high scales M[Formula: see text] 109 GeV and this seems in contradiction with gravitino bounds from inflation and baryogenesis. However, if gravitino is the lightest stable supersymmetric particle, it will not decay into other SUSY particles, avoiding the gravitino problem and providing a good cold dark matter (CDM). Gravitini are super heavy dark particles and they can be produced by non-adiabatic expansion during inflation. Intriguingly, from bounds on the correct abundance of dark matter (DM), we also constrain the neutrino sector. We set a limit on the exotic instantonic coupling of [Formula: see text] 10[Formula: see text]–10[Formula: see text]. This also sets constrains on the Calabi–Yau compactifications and on the string scale. This model strongly motivates very high energy DM indirect detection of neutrini and photons of 10[Formula: see text]–10[Formula: see text] GeV: gravitini can decay on them in a cosmological time because of soft R-parity breaking effective operators.


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