Slow-down of expanding bubbles in the early Universe
Nabeen Bhusal, Simone Blasi, Thomas Konstandin, Enrico Perboni, Jorinde van de Vis

TL;DR
This paper investigates the mechanisms behind the slow-down of bubble walls during early Universe phase transitions, analyzing shockwave effects and false vacuum droplet dynamics to understand their impact on gravitational wave signals.
Contribution
It introduces new models for bubble wall slow-down considering shock heating and droplet shrinkage, linking these effects to gravitational wave suppression in cosmological phase transitions.
Findings
Fast walls experience the most significant slow-down due to shock effects.
Droplet shrinkage slows down for stronger phase transitions and milder degrees of freedom change.
Geometrical factors like shock width influence gravitational wave suppression.
Abstract
We study slow-down effects for bubbles formed in a cosmological first-order phase transition (PT) focusing on deflagrations and hybrids, where the bubble wall is preceded by a shockwave of heated plasma. Slow-down has been observed in multi-bubble simulations together with a suppression of gravitational wave (GW) emission, mostly for slow walls. We study the impact of the shock waves on the wall velocity around percolation, by considering steady-state single-bubble solutions and incorporating the possible heating effects by two different mechanisms. First, we investigate the slow-down experienced by a bubble expanding into an impeding shockwave, where the temperature is higher than at nucleation, and the fluid is no longer at rest. Taking into account such heating and kinematic effects, we find that the most significant slow-down occurs for the fastest walls, and thus cannot explain the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
