Torsion-induced axions in string theory, quantum gravity and the cosmological tensions
Nick E. Mavromatos, Panagiotis Dorlis, Sotirios-Neilos Vlachos

TL;DR
This paper explores how torsion in string theory induces axions that can drive inflation, address cosmological tensions, and contribute to dark matter, through quantum gravity effects and primordial black hole production.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism where torsion-induced axions in string theory lead to inflation and dark matter components, linking quantum gravity effects with cosmological phenomena.
Findings
Torsion-induced axions can cause inflation without external inflaton fields.
Quantum gravity effects may help alleviate cosmological tensions.
Primordial black holes from axions could account for dark matter.
Abstract
We discuss the role of torsion in string theory on inducing pseudoscalar degrees of freedom (axions), which in turn couple to (gravitational) Chern-Simons (CS) anomalous terms. Such interactions can induce inflation, of running vacuum type, not requiring external inflaton fields, through condensation of the anomalous terms as a consequence of primordial chiral gravitational-wave (GW) tensor perturbations in a weak-quantum gravity setting. The presence of an UV cutoff for the GW quantum graviton modes opens up the system, leading to a dissipative behaviour realised via the presence of non trivial imaginary parts of the gravitational CS terms. The naive estimate of the life time of inflation based on such imaginary parts, which afflict the pertinent GW Hamiltonian, is quite consistent with the estimates of the duration of inflation based on an analysis of the condensate-induced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
