Cosmological consequences of spontaneous symmetry breaking
Giacomo Ferrante

TL;DR
This paper explores the cosmological implications of spontaneous symmetry breaking, introducing 'accidents' as light scalar candidates for dark matter and inflation, and examines topological defects and monopoles in the early universe.
Contribution
It introduces a new class of scalars called accidents, analyzes their role in dark matter and inflation, and studies topological defects and monopoles in cosmology.
Findings
Accidents can serve as viable dark matter candidates.
Accidents can drive cosmic inflation with naturally flat potentials.
Dark monopoles are unlikely to account for dark matter due to relic density constraints.
Abstract
The Standard Model of particle physics and the CDM model of cosmology provide an incomplete description of our Universe. Both models face challenges, including explaining the nature of dark matter, the origin of the Universe's initial conditions, and the fine-tuning of the Higgs boson mass. This thesis investigates the cosmological implications of spontaneous symmetry breaking to address some of these issues, focusing on theories with a non-trivial vacuum structure. We introduce a novel class of elementary scalars called ''accidents'', which emerge as accidentally flat directions in the vacuum manifold: unlike Nambu-Goldstone boson directions, accident directions are not related to any symmetry. Radiative corrections induce a mass for the accidents that is one-loop suppressed with respect to naive expectations, making them naturally light. We propose that accidents can act as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Computational Physics and Python Applications
