The fate of the false vacuum: Finite temperature, entropy and topological phase in quantum simulations of the early universe
King Lun Ng, Bogdan Opanchuk, Manushan Thenabadu, Margaret Reid and, Peter D. Drummond

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the feasibility of using Bose-Einstein condensates as quantum simulators to model false vacuum tunneling and topological phase formation, providing insights into early universe phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical phase-space method to simulate false vacuum tunneling in BECs, including finite temperature effects and topological phase analysis, without relying on thin-wall approximations.
Findings
Observation of false vacuum tunneling in BEC simulations
Formation of multiple bubble universes with distinct topologies
Topological phase entropy peaks during universe formation
Abstract
Despite being at the heart of the theory of the "Big Bang" and cosmic inflation, the quantum field theory prediction of false vacuum tunneling has not been tested. To address the exponential complexity of the problem, a table-top quantum simulator in the form of an engineered Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) has been proposed to give dynamical solutions of the quantum field equations. In this paper, we give a numerical feasibility study of the BEC quantum simulator under realistic conditions and temperatures, with an approximate truncated Wigner (tW) phase-space method. We report the observation of false vacuum tunneling in these simulations, and the formation of multiple bubble 'universes' with distinct topological properties. The tunneling gives a transition of the relative phase of coupled Bose fields from a metastable to a stable 'vacuum'. We include finite temperature effects that…
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