Astrophysical and Cosmological Implications of Large Volume String Compactifications
Joseph P. Conlon, Fernando Quevedo

TL;DR
This paper explores the spectrum, couplings, and cosmological implications of moduli fields in large volume string compactifications, highlighting their potential roles in dark matter and observable astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of moduli stabilization, decay properties, and cosmological effects in large volume IIB string models with TeV-scale supersymmetry breaking, including dark matter candidates.
Findings
Heavy moduli decay early, avoiding the cosmological moduli problem.
The overall volume modulus may contribute to dark matter and be detectable through gamma-ray or electron-positron signals.
The model's predictions are constrained by gamma-ray background observations and may explain the galactic center 511 keV line.
Abstract
We study the spectrum, couplings and cosmological and astrophysical implications of the moduli fields for the class of Calabi-Yau IIB string compactifications for which moduli stabilisation leads to an exponentially large volume V ~ 10^{15} l_s^6 and an intermediate string scale m_s ~ 10^{11}GeV, with TeV-scale observable supersymmetry breaking. All K\"ahler moduli except for the overall volume are heavier than the susy breaking scale, with m ~ ln(M_P/m_{3/2}) m_{3/2} ~ (\ln(M_P/m_{3/2}))^2 m_{susy} ~ 500 TeV and, contrary to standard expectations, have matter couplings suppressed only by the string scale rather than the Planck scale. These decay to matter early in the history of the universe, with a reheat temperature T ~ 10^7 GeV, and are free from the cosmological moduli problem (CMP). The heavy moduli have a branching ratio to gravitino pairs of 10^{-30} and do not suffer from the…
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