Model-dependent analysis method for energy budget of the cosmological first-order phase transition
Xiao Wang, Chi Tian, and Fa Peng Huang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a model-dependent method to accurately calculate the energy distribution during cosmological first-order phase transitions, improving predictions of gravitational wave signals by considering detailed fluid dynamics and temperature effects.
Contribution
It develops a new approach that solves scalar field equations with friction to determine bubble wall velocity and fluid profiles, enhancing precision over traditional methods.
Findings
Provides a more accurate kinetic energy fraction calculation.
Incorporates temperature-dependent sound speed effects.
Offers a consistent framework for gravitational wave predictions.
Abstract
The kinetic energy of the fluid shell in the cosmological first-order phase transition is crucial for predicting the gravitational wave signals generated by the sound wave mechanism. We propose a model-dependent method to calculate the kinetic energy fraction by dividing the bubble-fluid system into three distinct regions: the symmetric phase, the broken phase, and the bubble wall. By solving the local equation of motion of the scalar field with a phenomenological friction term, the bubble wall velocity and the boundary conditions of the fluid equations of both phases can be derived simultaneously. Then, for a given particle physics model, the fluid profiles of different hydrodynamical modes and the corresponding kinetic energy fraction can be obtained. Our method can also capture the temperature dependency of the sound speed of the plasma. Compared with the conventional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution
