Detection of cosmic superstrings by geodesic test particle motion
Betti Hartmann, Claus L\"ammerzahl, Parinya Sirimachan

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the motion of test particles around (p,q)-cosmic superstrings can reveal their presence, highlighting unique features like bound orbits for massive particles and potential observational signatures such as perihelion shifts.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of geodesic motion in (p,q)-string space-times, revealing new features like bound orbits for massive particles and potential observational indicators.
Findings
Massless particles only have escape orbits, while massive particles can have bound orbits.
Bound orbits occur when the Higgs boson mass exceeds the gauge boson mass.
Negative perihelion shifts could serve as signatures of finite width cosmic strings.
Abstract
(p,q)-strings are bound states of p F-strings and q D-strings and are predicted to form at the end of brane inflation. As such these cosmic superstrings should be detectable in the universe. In this paper we argue that they can be detected by the way that massive and massless test particles move in the space-time of these cosmic superstrings, in particular we study solutions to the geodesic equation in the space-time of field theoretical (p,q)-strings. The geodesics can be classified according to the test particle's energy, angular momentum and momentum in the direction of the string axis. We discuss how the change of the magnetic fluxes, the ratio between the symmetry breaking scale and the Planck mass, the Higgs to gauge boson mass ratios and the binding between the F- and D-strings, respectively, influence the motion of the test particles. While massless test particles can only move…
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