# Scaling from gauge and scalar radiation in Abelian Higgs string networks

**Authors:** Mark Hindmarsh, Joanes Lizarraga, Jon Urrestilla, David Daverio,, Martin Kunz

arXiv: 1703.06696 · 2017-08-22

## TL;DR

This study uses large-scale numerical simulations to analyze the scaling behavior and energy loss mechanisms of Abelian Higgs cosmic string networks, providing insights into their evolution and implications for cosmological observations.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that scalar and gauge radiation drive the scaling of string networks and validates the core growth method, offering improved extrapolation for cosmological predictions.

## Key findings

- String networks exhibit scaling over a wide range of scales.
- Energy loss into classical radiation explains the scaling behavior.
- Nambu-Goto approximation underestimates string separation by 25%.

## Abstract

We investigate cosmic string networks in the Abelian Higgs model using data from a campaign of large-scale numerical simulations on lattices of up to $4096^3$ grid points. We observe scaling or self-similarity of the networks over a wide range of scales, and estimate the asymptotic values of the mean string separation in horizon length units $\dot{\xi}$ and of the mean square string velocity $\bar v^2$ in the continuum and large time limits. The scaling occurs because the strings lose energy into classical radiation of the scalar and gauge fields of the Abelian Higgs model. We quantify the energy loss with a dimensionless radiative efficiency parameter, and show that it does not vary significantly with lattice spacing or string separation. This implies that the radiative energy loss underlying the scaling behaviour is not a lattice artefact, and justifies the extrapolation of measured network properties to large times for computations of cosmological perturbations. We also show that the core growth method, which increases the defect core width with time to extend the dynamic range of simulations, does not introduce significant systematic error. We compare $\dot{\xi}$ and $\bar v^2$ to values measured in simulations using the Nambu-Goto approximation, finding that the latter underestimate the mean string separation by about 25%, and overestimate $\bar v^2$ by about 10%. The scaling of the string separation implies that string loops decay by the emission of massive radiation within a Hubble time in field theory simulations, in contrast to the Nambu-Goto scenario which neglects this energy loss mechanism. String loops surviving for only one Hubble time emit much less gravitational radiation than in the Nambu-Goto scenario, and are consequently subject to much weaker gravitational wave constraints on their tension.

## Full text

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## Figures

30 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.06696/full.md

## References

58 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.06696/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.06696