Supercool subtleties of cosmological phase transitions
Peter Athron, Csaba Bal\'azs, Lachlan Morris

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the commonly used nucleation temperature in cosmological phase transition analysis, highlighting its limitations and proposing the percolation temperature as a more reliable reference for gravitational wave predictions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the nucleation temperature is neither fundamental nor essential, and introduces model-independent bounds on bubble wall velocity to better predict transition completion.
Findings
Nucleation temperature can be misleading for strong supercooling.
Percolation temperature better indicates transition progress and gravitational wave signals.
Provided bounds on bubble wall velocity for transition completion.
Abstract
We investigate rarely explored details of supercooled cosmological first-order phase transitions at the electroweak scale, which may lead to strong gravitational wave signals or explain the cosmic baryon asymmetry. The nucleation temperature is often used in phase transition analyses, and is defined through the nucleation condition: on average one bubble has nucleated per Hubble volume. We argue that the nucleation temperature is neither a fundamental nor essential quantity in phase transition analysis. We illustrate scenarios where a transition can complete without satisfying the nucleation condition, and conversely where the nucleation condition is satisfied but the transition does not complete. We also find that simple nucleation heuristics, which are defined to approximate the nucleation temperature, break down for strong supercooling. Thus, studies that rely on the nucleation…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
