Detection of Low Tension Cosmic Superstrings
David F. Chernoff, S.-H. Henry Tye

TL;DR
This paper reviews the properties of low tension cosmic superstrings, models their detectability through gravitational waves and other signals, and forecasts detection rates considering their unique cosmological behaviors and clustering effects.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model for low tension cosmic superstrings, incorporating string theory effects, network dynamics, and structure formation to predict detection prospects.
Findings
Clustering increases superstring loop density by ~10^5 near the Sun.
Detection rates depend on string tension and experiment sensitivity.
Forecasts suggest detectable gravitational wave bursts for certain tension ranges.
Abstract
Cosmic superstrings of string theory differ from conventional cosmic strings of field theory. We review how the physical and cosmological properties of the macroscopic string loops influence experimental searches for these relics from the epoch of inflation. The universe's average density of cosmic superstrings can easily exceed that of conventional cosmic strings having the same tension by two or more orders of magnitude. The cosmological behavior of the remnant superstring loops is qualitatively distinct because the string tension is exponentially smaller than the string scale in flux compactifications in string theory. Low tension superstring loops live longer, experience less recoil (rocket effect from the emission of gravitational radiation) and tend to cluster like dark matter in galaxies. Clustering enhances the string loop density with respect to the cosmological average in…
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