Front. Phys.Frontiers in PhysicsFront. Phys.2296-424XFrontiers Media S.A.10.3389/fphy.2014.00060PhysicsReview ArticleBosonic coherent motions in the UniverseKimJihn E.12*SemertzidisYannis K.34TsujikawaShinji51Department of Physics, Seoul National UniversitySeoul, Korea2Department of Physics, Kyung Hee UniversitySeoul, Korea3Center for Axion and Precision Physics Research (Institute for Basic Science)Daejeon, Korea4Department of Physics, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and TechnologyDaejeon, Korea5Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Tokyo University of ScienceTokyo, Japan
Edited by: Nicolao Fornengo, University of Torino, Italy
Reviewed by: Alessandro Mirizzi, Hamburg University, Germany; Stefano Morisi, University of Wurzburg, Germany
*Correspondence: Jihn E. Kim, Department of Physics, Seoul National University, Building No. 56, 1 Gwanakdaero, Gwanak-Gu, Seoul 151-747, Korea e-mail: jihnekim@gmail.com
This article was submitted to High-Energy and Astroparticle Physics, a section of the journal Frontiers in Physics.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
We review the role of fundamental spin-0 bosons as bosonic coherent motion (BCM) in the Universe. The fundamental spin-0 bosons have the potential to account for the baryon number generation, cold dark matter (CDM) via BCM, inflation, and dark energy. Among these, we pay particular attention to the CDM possibility because it can be experimentally tested with the current experimental techniques. We also comment on the panoply of the other roles of spin-0 bosons–such as those for cosmic accelerations at early and late times.
axioncold dark matterdark energycosmological constantglobal symmetryunification of forcesinflation1. Introduction
Recent cosmological observations [1, 2] confirm the eight decade old Zwicky's proposal [3] that the Universe contains a large amount of dark matter (DM). The DM profile has been measured accurately enough to pinpoint DM to “it is cold dark matter (CDM) [1].” The bosonic coherent motion (BCM) can be CDM [4–6] if the coherent-boson lifetime is long enough to have survived until now [7–10]. The axion proposed to solve the strong CP problem [11–14] is fitting to this BCM scenario [15]. The BCM is one of many possibilities of CDM scenarios [15] which accounts for only 27% in the energy pie of the Universe. The dominant portion, 68%, in the energy pie is the homogeneous energy density, at least up to the 103 Mpc scale, which is usually referred to dark energy. Dark energy (DE) being homogeneous cannot be accounted for by corpuscular particles but may be accountable by the cosmological constant or by some vacuum expectation value (VEV) of spin-0 boson(s) [16–22]. The visible particles (mostly atoms in the energy count) constitute only 5% in the energy pie.
If we accept the Big Bang cosmology from the earliest possible time, 10−43 s, the success of the Standard Model of particle physics is based on the assumption of very tiny DE of order less than 10−46 GeV4 because the age of the Universe is very long ≃ 13.8 Gy [1, 2]. So, the DE problem or the theoretical cosmological constant problem [23] is not only the problem in cosmology but also a problem in particle physics. Out of despair, many adopt the anthropic scenario for the cosmological constant problem [24–26]. For the anthropic solution to work, the cosmological constant must be a free undetermined parameter in particle physics, as integration constants of Hawking [27], Kim et al. [28] and Kim [29]. In a deterministic theory such as in string theory, possible cosmological constants must be allowed near 0 for our Universe to have adopted one of these, which is the reason trying to have as many as 10120 models, to pack the vacua with separation between them by (10−3 eV)4, from string theory [26]. But, all those 10120 vacua must allow three family Standard Models, and satisfy the known SM phenomena such as the grand unified theory (GUT) scale weak mixing angle sin2 θW = 3/8 [30–32], etc. But, we have only a handful of minimal supersymmetric Standard Models from string theory satisfying the requirements [33–37]. Or, a Standard Model solution with DE ≃ 10−47 GeV4 has to be found so that the anthropic argument chooses it. This search seems more difficult than finding a vanishing cosmological constant solution theoretically. At present, we can say that the anthopic solution in string theory has not worked out yet. Therefore, in the Standard Model and in its supergravity extension, it is fair to say that the cosmological constant is assumed to be zero.
By observing the luminosities of Type-I supernovae [38, 39], the recent acceleration of the Universe has been established. So, explaining the DE scale of 10−47 GeV4 − 10−46 GeV4 became an important topic [19–21]. In Table 1, we list several ideas proposed to account for this recent acceleration of the Universe. Both the high scale inflation [45–47] and the recent acceleration [38, 39] in the Universe are based on the assumption of vanishing cosmological constant.
Typical DE models with a few pseudo-Goldstone bosons originating from global symmetries.
Ideas
Description (scalar S or pseudoscalar P)
Discrete symmetry?
Fine-tuning?
Model from string
MONDa
Change Newtonian gravity. (No boson)
Irrelevant
Yes
Not yet
Anthropic principle
Out of many possible vacua, only those suitable for age > tU survived. (S or P)
Irrelevant
Irrelevant
Not yetb
Quintessence
With a runaway V ∝ 1/ϕn. (S)
No
Yesc
Not yet
Dilaton
pseudo-Goldstone boson from dilaton sym. (S)
No
Yesd
Not yet
U(1)DE Gold. boson
pseudo-Goldstone boson from U(1)DE sym. (P)
Yes
No
Yese
Milgrom [40] and Beckenstein and Milgrom [41],
Zee [26],
Zlatev et al. [42],
Wetterich [43],
Kim [44].
To determine the VEV of a scalar field, say ϕ, one must consider all the allowed effective terms at low energy. At each interaction point, suitable symmetry requirements must be satisfied. A typical mass scale of ϕ is given by the effective mass term m2|ϕ|2. In Figure 1, we consider only two diagrams with the dimension 4 (d = 4) couplings. If each d = 4 vertex of Figure 1 satisfies the global phase symmetry, the two-loop and one-loop mass terms do not break the global symmetry. On the other hand, each d = 4 vertex satisfies the dilaton symmetry (requiring just d = 4 couplings) but the diagrams of Figure 1 are d = 2 terms which of course break the dilaton symmetry. One well-known model breaking the dilaton symmetry at the one-loop quantum level, including the d ≥ 6 terms, is the Coleman-Weinberg model [48]. Therefore, it is not likely that a consistent calculation of a small DE scale can be performed by introducing the dilaton symmetry. However, some global phase symmetry may be suitable for this.
Diagrams leading to dimension 2 interactions with dimension 4 coupling at each vertex.
In Section 2, we present the focus points of this review: the BCM scenarios and the axion detection experiments. In Section 3, we point out the difficulty of obtaining zero cosmological constant theoretically. In Section 4, we mini-review the inflationary cosmology, in particular in view of the recent BICEP2 data. In Section 5, we discuss the subject of this review: why the role of fundamental spin-0 particles are important in cosmology.
2. Spin-0 boson filling the universe
After the discovery of a fundamental spin-0 scalar particle (the Brout-Englert-Higgs boson) at the LHC, it is timely to study the roles of fundamental spin-0 bosons in the Universe. It is very interesting to note that fundamental spin-0 bosons have been employed to account for the mothers of atoms (i.e., baryon number generation via the Affleck-Dine mechanism [49]), CDM via BCM [4], DE via a transient cosmological constant [50–54], and even the vacuum energy needed for the high scale inflation [45–47]. Among these, we focus on CDM via BCM in this review because similar ideas can be applicable to DE and inflation models. Another attractive point discussing CDM via BCM is that it can be experimentally proved in the near future [55].
We are familiar with the ether idea of the late 19th Century, filling out the Universe. The VEV idea of spin-0 particles used for breaking global symmetries [56] and gauge symmetries [57, 58] is a kind of ether. If a scalar field ϕ has a universal value over the entire Universe, any operation of the type “Poincare transformation” does not notice a change. Thus, the VEV of a scalar field, 〈ϕ〉, respects the Poincare symmetry. But, if ϕ is a complex field, then the VEV breaks the phase transformation symmetry, i.e., breaks a global phase symmetry [56]. Even though the Brout-Englert-Higgs mechanism [57–60] for breaking gauge symmetries is not a monopoly of spin-0 particles [61–63], now the role of spin-0 particles becomes more important, especially after a hint of large tensor-to-scalar ratio r, based on the BICEP2 observation [64].
Let us denote scalar and pseudoscalar particles as s and a, respectively. Scalar particles transform under the parity operation as P : s(x) → + s(−x), and pseudoscalar particles transform as P : a(x) → − a(−x). If they are components of a complex field, it is usually represented as the radial and phase fields, respectively, ϕ = seia/f where f is a mass parameter. Thus, the complex field transforms under parity as P: ϕ(x) → ϕ*(−x). Any pseudoscalar field represented as a phase can be represented by an angle field with the angle defined in the range [0, 2Nπ), where N is the domain-wall number. A Goldstone boson arising from breaking a global phase symmetry by the VEV v is a pseudoscalar field a defined as
〈ϕ〉=v+s2eia/f,〈s〉=0,〈a〉=[0,2Nπf).2.1. Cosmology with BCM
On the flat Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker cosmological background space described by the line element ds2 = − dt2 + a2(t)δijdxidxj, the evolution of the classical scalar field ϕ, (i.e., the evolution of the VEV of ϕ), is given by
d2dt2〈ϕ〉+3Hddt〈ϕ〉+V′(〈ϕ〉)=0,
where H = ȧ/a is the Hubble parameter and V′ = (d/d 〈 ϕ〉)V is a derivative of the potential V (a dot represents a derivative with respect to the cosmic time t). With a discrete symmetry ϕ → −ϕ, the leading term of V′ is the mass term m2 〈 ϕ 〉. When 〈 ϕ 〉 moves very slowly, we can neglect the second derivative term, and the evolution equation gives 3H ϕ˙ ≃ − m2 ϕ. 〈 ϕ 〉 starts to change rapidly when H becomes small enough to satisfy 3H≃ m. After this condition is met, 〈 ϕ 〉 oscillates rapidly, as shown in Figure 2, which is interpreted as the BCM of ϕ.
After t1, the BCM potential of 〈ϕ〉 at the red bullet oscillates around the minimum.
As mentioned above, the VEV 〈 ϕ 〉 is assumed to be the same over the entire Universe for the Poincare invariance, otherwise the invariance is broken. In the Universe, this homogeneity is subtly broken. The inflation manages different scales of quantum fluctuations enter the horizon at different scales, basically breaking the homogeneity. A given scale condenses gravitationally. The VEV in that scale evolves according to Equation (2), and describes the BCM of 〈ϕ 〉.
From the Friedmann equation we have 3H2M2P = ρ, where ρ is the energy density of the Universe and MP is the reduced Planck mass (MP = 2.4 × 1018 GeV). Denoting the time at the onset of oscillations of 〈ϕ〉 as t1, the condition for determining t1 is
3ρ(t1)MP2=m(t1).
These oscillations are equivalent to a gas of ϕ particles of low-momentum. This kind of spin-0 particle coherent motion was first discussed in Preskill et al. [4], Abbott and Sikivie [5] and Dine and Fischler [6] for the case ϕ = axion. It is known that the BCM behaves like CDM because of the low-momentum. Thus, the number and energy densities are given by
n=m〈ϕ〉2,ρ=m2〈ϕ〉2.
We denote the current age of the Universe as tU. Depending on t1 and tU, we can classify BCMs as
BCM: If t1 < tU, the currently oscillating vacuum 〈ϕ〉 is BCM. The BCM can be classified into the following two sub-categories.
⋆ BCM1: The lifetime of ϕ is long enough, τϕ > tU. Then, the oscillating BCM contributes to the CDM amount. The QCD axion belongs here.
⋆ BCM2: The lifetime of ϕ is short, τϕ < tU. Then, all ϕ quanta decayed already, producing SM particles. The inflaton with τϕ ~ 10−36 s belongs here and reheating after inflation gives the beginning of the radiation-dominated Universe.
CCtmp: Temporary cosmological constant. On the other hand, if 〈ϕ〉 has not oscillated yet, then t1 > tU and 〈ϕ〉 stays there now, behaves like a cosmological constant, but it is a temporary phenomenon and will eventually become BCM1 after t1. For this to be satisfied, the mass is around 10−33 eV with a trans-Planckian decay constant [65]. If V(〈ϕ〉) describes CCtmp, the equation of state wϕ, characterized by the field energy density ρϕ=12ϕ˙2+V(ϕ) and the pressure Pϕ=12ϕ˙2−V(ϕ), is a useful parameter,
wϕ≡Pϕρϕ=12ϕ˙2−V(ϕ)12ϕ˙2+V(ϕ).
Provided that 12ϕ˙2≪V(ϕ), wϕ is close to −1, behaving like the cosmological constant. In order to realize the recent acceleration, we require the condition wϕ<−13.
2.2. Scalar particles
The Brout-Englert-Higgs boson is the only known fundamental scalar field. The other scalar most widely used in particle theory is dilaton, the scalar Goldstone boson arising from breaking the dilatonic symmetry. The effect of dilatonic symmetry on the cosmological constant problem has been discussed extensively in Wetterich [43]. For the solution, however, a fine-tuning is needed. The obvious effect of a VEV of a scalar field s in cosmology is the universal constant on the right-hand-side of the Einstein equation.
The scalar-field cosmology in the presence of a barotropic perfect fluid was studied in 1980–1990s [43, 66–76], even before the discovery of the recent cosmic acceleration. This was chiefly motivated by the “missing matter problem” in 1980s. In 1990, Fukugita et al. [77] tested cosmological models against observations of the number count of faint galaxies and showed that these data favor the Universe with low matter density (i.e., matter is missing). In the abstract of their paper they stated that “Furthermore, it is shown that the best agreement with the data is obtained with a sizable cosmological constant, including the case of zero curvature model as predicted by inflation.” In addition, it was already known in the early 1990s that the presence of a cosmological constant can make the age of the Universe longer such that it is consistent with the age of oldest globular clusters.
If the cosmological constant originates from a vacuum energy appearing in particle physics, it is vastly larger than the today's average cosmological density [23]. Because of this problem, people tried to construct dynamical cosmological constant models in which the energy density of cosmological constant varies in time, basically belonging to a kind of CCtmp. For example, if we consider a dilaton field ϕ, the cosmological constant depends on ϕ by transforming the dilatonic action to the so-called Einstein-frame action (in which the dilaton does not have a direct coupling with the Ricci scalar) [43, 67].
Exponential potentials often arise from the curvature of internal spaces associated with the geometry of extra dimensions (so called “modulus” fields) [78, 79]. Inspired by this, the exponential potential V(s) = V0e−λ sMP has been used, with constant parameters V0 and λ. There are two distinct fixed points on the flat Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker cosmological background space [19, 76]: (a) the scaling solution, and (b) the scalar-field dominated solution.
For λ2 > 3(1 + wm), where wm is the equation of state for a background fluid, the solutions approach the scaling fixed point (a), characterized by the field density parameter Ωs = 3(1 + wm)/λ2 and the field equation of state ws = wm [69, 73, 76]. Even for the initial conditions where ρs is larger than ρm in the early radiation-dominated era, the field eventually enters the scaling regime in which ρs is proportional to ρm with ρs/ρm = constant < 1. The field energy density of the scaling solution contributes to the total energy density of the Universe, but it does not lead to the cosmic acceleration. For λ2 < 3(1 + wm), there exists the scalar-field dominated fixed point (b), characterized by Ωs = 1 and ws = −1 + λ2/3. The late-time cosmic acceleration can be realized for λ2 < 2. Since in this case the point (b) is also stable, the scalar field can be the source of DE. For λ2 < 2, the scalar potential is quite shallow, so the field density in the early Universe needs to be much smaller than the background energy density (unlike the scaling solution discussed above).
After the discovery of the recent cosmic acceleration in 1998, the cosmological dynamics of “quintessence” (a canonical scalar field responsible for DE) were studied in detail for several different potentials [80, 81]. One example is the inverse power-law potential V(s) = M4 + ns−n, where M and n are positive constants. This potential can arise in globally supersymmetric QCD theories [82]1. The Universe enters the stage of cosmic acceleration for the field value larger than s0 ≈ MP. Since V(s0) is of the order of H20M2P, one can estimate the mass scale M as M ≈ 10−(46 − 19n)/(4 + n) GeV. For n = O(1), this energy scale can be compatible with that appearing in particle physics.
In the presence of a perfect fluid with the equation of state wm, there exists a so-called tracker solution for the potential V(s) = M4 + ns−n. The tracker is characterized by a common, cosmic evolutionary trajectory that attracts solutions with a wide range of initial conditions [81]. The field equation of state along the tracker is given by ws = (wmn − 2)/(n + 2), which corresponds to ws = −2/(n + 2) > − 1 during the matter era. The slope of the potential λ = −MPV,s/V = nMP/s gets smaller with the growth of s, so ws approaches −1 in the future. The inverse power-law potential belongs to a class of freezing quintessence models [83] in which the evolution of the field gradually slows down.
There is another class of quintessence models, dubbed thawing models [83], in which the field has been frozen by Hubble friction and then it starts to evolve after the Hubble parameter drops below the field mass m. In this case the field equation of state ws is close to −1 at the initial stage, but it starts to grow at the late cosmological epoch. The field mass ms responsible for dark energy corresponds to ms ≃ 10−33 eV [65]. The representative potential of thawing models is that of a pseudo-scalar field arising from breaking the global U(1) symmetry (which we will explain more details in Section 2.3).
If we consider a scalar field ϕ non-minimally coupled to the Ricci scalar R (like dilaton), this gives rise to a coupling with non-relativistic matter in the Einstein frame [84]. The fifth force induced by such a matter coupling needs to be suppressed in the solar system. There are several ways to suppress the propagation of the fifth force in local regions of the Universe.
One is the so-called chameleon mechanism [85], under which the mass of a scalar degree of freedom is different depending on the matter densities in the surrounding environment. If the effective mass is sufficiently large in the regions of high density, the coupling between the field and non-relativistic matter can be suppressed by having a thin shell inside a spherically symmetric body. In Brans-Dicke theory (including f(R) gravity) [86] it is possible to suppress the propagation of the fifth force by designing the field potential V(ϕ) appropriately [87–92].
Another is the so-called Vainshtein mechanism [93], under which non-linear scalar-field self interactions can suppress the fifth force at short distances even in the absence of the field potential. The self interactions of the form (∂ ϕ)2 □ ϕ, which correspond to the Lagrangian of covariant Galileons [94], can lead to the decoupling of the field ϕ from matter within a radius much larger than the solar-system scale [95–98].
2.3. Pseudoscalar particles
Most pseudoscalar particles observed so far are pseudo-Goldstone bosons. Let a, Λ and f, respectively, be a Goldstone boson from a spontaneously-broken global U(1) symmetry, the dominant explicit symmetry breaking mass parameter, and the decay constant. Then, the mass of a is
ma=caΛ2f,
where ca is the number given by the explicit symmetry breaking terms. For the QCD axion, the breaking of the U(1) symmetry is given by the QCD anomaly and we have ca Λ2 = [Z1/2/(1 + Z)] fπmπ with Z = mu/md where fπ, mπ, mu, md are neutral-pion decay constant, its mass, and u and d quark masses [14]. If the explicit breaking term is given by Vbr = −(Λ4 − n ϕn + h.c.)/2, then we have ma = (f/Λ)n/2 (nΛ2/f). As shown in Figure 1, the pseudo-Goldstone boson arising from a global symmetry U(1)gl does not appear in the loops if each vertex satisfies U(1)gl. But, it is known that all global symmetries are approximate [44, 99–102]. Most strong explicit breaking may be from the anomaly of the type U(1)gl-G-G, where G is a non-Abelian gauge group.
The most waited-for pseudoscalar particle is the very light axion in the axion window because its discovery will confirm at least three: (1) a physical confirmation of instanton solutions of non-Abelian gauge theories [103], (2) ´t Hooft solution [104] of the U(1) problem of QCD [105], and (3) at least some portion of CDM in the Universe. The particle axion was first appreciated by Weinberg and Wilczek in the Ben Lee Memorial Conference in October, 1977 [106], using the Peccei-Quinn (PQ) symmetry [107]. If G is QCD, the symmetry U(1)gl is called the PQ symmetry U(1)PQ and the pseudo-Goldstone boson a related to U(1)PQ is called the QCD axion. The axion is needed to understand the strong CP problem of “Why is the neutron electric diplole moment so small even though the gluon interactions (in the presence of instanton solutions of QCD) allow a neutron-size dipole moment?” In early days, three kinds of solutions to the strong CP problem were admitted [11]: the calculable solution, the massless up quark case, and the axion solution. The calculable solutions have not provided yet an acceptable model with sufficiently small neutron electric dipole moment. The massless up quark case is not favored in the global fit [14]. The remaining axion solution is checked in various cases as discussed in the next Subsect.
Field theory examples on axions with renormalizable couplings corresponding to BCM1 are usually classified to the KSVZ and DFSZ models [7–10]. But, this classification is too simple. There can be many KSVZ and DFSZ type models with one type of quark representations [108]. One may introduce many different types of quarks also for axion phenomenology.
Therefore, it is better to have a theory predicting definite PQ charges of the quarks in a full theory. The most attractive proposal along this line is the string compactification. Here, the PQ global symmetry is determined once the compactification scheme is presented. Standard models obtained from string compactification include many quarks beyond the Standard Model spectrum, in particular numerous singlet fields. Along this line, several years ago a QCD axion including non-renormalizable terms was studied and the axion-photon-photon coupling has been calculated with an approximate U(1)PQ symmetry [109]. Recently, an exact U(1)PQ symmetry has been studied in a string compactification where the axion-photon-photon coupling has been calculated below the PQ symmetry breaking scale [110],
caγγ=1123388−1.98≃0.91.
We expect that more calculations of caγγ will be performed in string models with the property of successful Standard Model phenomenologies, which will guide us where to look for the QCD axion [55].
Dark energy can be the case of CCtmp in the above classification. Pseudoscalar CCtmp have been discussed already more than a decade ago in Kim and Nilles [50], Choi [54] and Nomura et al. [111]. But, a more plausible analysis, looking into the detail of string compactification, has been presented recently [44, 102, 112].
The field mass ma responsible for dark energy corresponds to ma ≃ 10−33 eV [65]. Meanwhile, if the axion field is responsible for CDM, the typical mass scale is between 10−5 eV and 10−2 eV [14]. In string theory there are many ultralight axions possibly down to the Hubble scale H0 = 10−33 eV [113]. Axions in the mass range between 10−28 and 10−18 eV become non-relativistic at a later cosmological epoch relative to the standard CDM. Such a light scalar field leads to the suppression of the CDM power spectrum on small scales [113–115] (like light massive neutrinos), so there is an observational signature for ultralight axions if the axion potential is of the form [1 − cos(a/fa)]3 [112].2
2.4. Axion detection
Figure 3 captures the idea behind the main experimental axion dark matter detection effort. There are two equivalent pictures describing the axion to photon conversion in the presence of a Direct-Current (DC) magnetic field B [116–118], briefly described here: The axion decays to two photons through the triangle anomaly. Its lifetime, for an axion mass in the μeV range, is of order 1050 s, much larger than the lifetime of our Universe. This decay rate can be significantly enhanced in the presence of a DC B-field via the inverse Primakov effect [116]. This decay rate is additionally enhanced by the density of the final states, e.g., the quality factor Q of a resonant microwave cavity when its resonant frequency coincides with the axion field oscillation frequency.
The magnetic and electric field behavior used in the axion detection experiments. The CP violating effect is ∝ B · E, and the oscillating tiny E over the constant large B is schematically drawn. The E follows the oscillation of the classical axion field 〈 a 〉.
In the second picture the axion couples to the product of E · B, where E is an electric field. In the presence of a DC magnetic field there is an oscillating electric field appearing with the same frequency as the axion field. If the DC magnetic field is of finite extent, then the oscillating E-field induces an azimuthal oscillating magnetic field due to Maxwell's equations. If there is a resonant microwave cavity at the same boundary and with the same resonant frequency, it then provides feedback that enhances the oscillating E-field by the quality factor of the cavity [117, 118]. The power conversion of the axion DM to microwave photons estimated by the two methods is the same and it is given by
Pa→γ=gaγγ2(ρama)B02VCjQL,
where QL is the cavity loaded quality factor, Cj is the mode filling factor, ga γ γ is the axion-photon-photon coupling constant, ρa is the axion DM local density, ma is the axion mass, B0 is the strength of the DC magnetic field and V the volume of the cavity.
The expected power conversion Pa → γ is extra-ordinarily small, but nonetheless it can be within the present experimental capabilities for an axion mass in the 1–20 μ eV range. Have we known the axion mass with a 1 part per million (ppm) accuracy, it would take less than a day to detect it if axions were more than 10% of the DM. The main issue is that, barring the BICEP2 results [119, 120], we have no such information. The best-suited axion DM mass is below about 1 meV all the way to about 1 μeV, spanning three orders of magnitude with a potential line width of about 1 ppm. Clearly, scanning the whole axion mass range will require too many steps, and therefore the sensitivity needs to be very high at each step.
Furthermore, in some theoretical scenarios, the axion DM mass is not constrained from below and can be very light, well below 1 μeV. In addition to the microwave cavity method, which is mostly applicable between 1 and 20 μeV, other methods include looking for axions emitted by Sun's core, and astrophysical limits, as axions can provide another channel of energy loss, significantly altering the star lifetime. An overview of the present experimental/astrophysical limits of the axion coupling constant vs. the axion mass are given in Figure 4.
Experimental/astrophysical limits of gaγ vs. ma [15]. The experiments giving the limits are shown. The KSVZ and DFSZ lines are from Kim [108], and the string calculation is the green line [110]. The limit of the yellow region is the largest one from kim [108]. The excluded gray region is from Marsh et al. [119] and Vissineli and Gondolo [120], allowing a factor 5 generosity due to the domain wall annihilation problem [165]. The astrophysics lines in the bigger box represent that the regions above those lines are excluded.
Looking at Equation (8), it is clear there is a number of possible improvements one can make in this method: (i) Increase the magnetic field value, (ii) Increase the magnetic field volume, and (iii) Increase the cavity quality factor. The pioneering axion DM experiments that started in the late 1980's [121, 122] probed an axion DM candidate in a limited mass region, assuming a stronger axion to photon coupling than is required by theory by roughly two orders of magnitude.
Over a period of more than 15 years, the dominant axion dark matter experiment (ADMX), currently located at the University of Washington and ADMX-HF located at Yale University, have made several conceptual improvements and have improved on those limits. The second generation ADMX experiment, owing to the development of very low noise SQUID amplifiers just below 1 GHz [123] and a number of additional smaller developments, has reached the boundaries of a plausible axion DM candidates. Currently implementing a dilution refrigerator to their system is expected to allow them to either detect or exclude an axion comprising 100% of the DM for masses in the range 1–20 μeV.
The new Center for Axion and Precision Physics (CAPP)3 established by the Institute for Basic Science in South Korea4, plans to either detect or exclude an axion DM component down to the 10% level for a similar axion mass range. This will be achieved by Semertzidis [55] (a) Development of a 25 T and then a 35 T solenoidal magnet compared to the currently used 8–9 T solenoidal magnets, (b) Substantially improving, roughly by an order of magnitude, the quality factor of the microwave cavities in the presence of strong magnetic fields, and (c) Constructing and running a toroidal cavity with a large volume and a reasonable B-field value so that the overall product B2V is an order of magnitude larger than present values.
The commonly used NbTi superconducting cable has a critical current that falls very rapidly as the magnetic field increases above 10 T, making it unsuitable to obtain higher B-field strengths. However, recent developments with high Tc cables makes possible achieving much higher current densities at large B-field values, when they are cooled at low temperatures around 4 K. This is an experimental method fueled by the energy-storage field and prototype magnets are already under development. CAPP is collaborating with the Magnet Division of Brookhaven National Laboratory to develop a 10 cm inner bore diameter capable of producing around 25 T of magnetic field. Preliminary tests on different high Tc cables are providing encouraging results that the goal can be met. The expected time period for this development is of order of 5 years, after which we develop a separate magnet with a goal of achieving 35 T peak magnetic field, albeit with smaller inner bore diameter. The next step would be to configure a toroidal magnetic field, optimizing the use of the magnetic field as the fringe field is minimized in that geometry. Preliminary cable testing results also point to this geometry for achieving the highest possible magnetic field values. The time scale for this development is of order 10 years.
The presently used cavities have a quality factor between 50 and 100 K. It has been reported by ADMX that they are developing cavities with thin-film superconducting coatings on the vertical side walls with the goal of increasing the cavity quality factor by roughly a factor of five. This is possible when the B-field is shaped to be aligned with the vertical wall, minimizing the transverse B-field below about 100 Gauss. Further increases of the quality factor are hindered by the top/bottom surfaces of the right-cylindrical cavity as the magnetic field angle traversing the surface is very close to 90°. Our plan to further improve upon this achievement is two-fold: First, develop a toroidal cavity where the B-field can be shaped along the cavity walls reducing the transverse B-field below the required level. If that is possible, the quality factor can be increased by several orders of magnitude. Second, the top/bottom plates are going to be treated in a way that the B-field can penetrate it without affecting the superconducting layer on the inside of the cavity. Again, the quality factor can potentially increase by several orders of magnitude.
The expected axion width is of order 1 ppm, i.e., the axion quality factor is a bit better than 106. Therefore, the best one can do is to produce a cavity with the same quality factor, so the best one can expect is to gain a factor of 10–20 in the axion to photon power conversion. The scanning speed goes as the square root of the quality factor since there are more steps required in order to cover all possible frequencies, i.e., the best one can expect to do is a scanning speed improvement factor between three and five.
BICEP2 results favor axion masses in the meV range, albeit with only 1–10% of DM composed of axions. This fact makes it particularly difficult to detect it as the volume of microwave cavities are particularly small and not of much practical use at those frequencies, plus the axion DM density is very weak. If the BICEP2 results turn out to be confirmed,5 one could follow a different strategy in detecting axions [124]. If the axion mass were to be found, then one could launch a dedicated axion DM experiment within a very small axion mass range having much higher chances of success.
3. The cosmological constant problem and string theory
In order to realize the present-day cosmic acceleration with the cosmological constant Λ, we require that Λ is of the order of H20, i.e., Λ ≈ H20 = (2.1332h × 10−42 GeV)2, where h ≈ 0.7. This corresponds to the energy density ρΛ ≈ Λ M2P ≈ 10−120M4P. Even before the discovery of the present-day cosmic acceleration, Weinberg [24] put the bound on ρΛ, as
−2×10−120MP4≲ρΛ≲6×10−118MP4.
The lower bound comes from the fact that the negative cosmological constant does not lead to the collapse of the Universe today. The upper bound corresponds to the requirement that the vacuum energy does not dominate over the matter density for redshifts z larger than 1 to realize the successful structure formation.
There have been attempts to explain the very low values of ρΛ ranging the Weinberg bound (9). For example, Bousso and Polchinski [126] employed the 4-form field Fμ ν λ σ with the energy density Fμ ν λ σFμ ν λ σ/48 = c2/2, where c is a constant. In the context of string theory, there are “electric charges” (membranes) sourcing the 4-form field dual to “magnetic charges” (5-branes). The constant c can be quantized in integer (n) multiples of the membrane charge q, such that c = nq.
Bousso and Polchinski introduced J 4-form fields together with J membrane species with charges q1, q2, …, qJ. The number J can be as large as 100 in string theory. Since the flux energy density of each charge is given by n2iq2i/2, the effective cosmological constant reads
Λ=Λb+∑i=1Jni2qi2/2,
where Λb is the bare cosmological constant. For the anti de Sitter minimum with Λb < 0, there exist integers ni satisfying
2|Λb|<∑i=1Jni2qi2<2(|Λb|+ΔΛ),
where ΔΛ ≃ −123 in the unit MP = 1.
If we consider a J-dimensional grid with axes corresponding to niqi, the displacement of the 4-form field is given by discrete grid points with integers ni. The region (11) corresponds to a thin-shell characterized by the radius r=2|Λb| and the width Δr=ΔΛ/2|Λb|. The volume of the thin-shell is
VS=ΩJ−1rJ−1Δr=ΩJ−1|2Λb|J/2−1ΔΛ,
where ΩJ − 1 = 2πJ/2/Γ(J/2) is the area of a unit (J − 1)-dimensional sphere. A grid cell has a volume VC=∏i=1Jqi. There is at least one value of Λ for VC < VS, i.e.,
∏i=1Jqi<2πJ/2Γ(J/2)|2Λb|J/2−1ΔΛ.
When J = 100, |Λb| = 1 and ΔV = 10−123 with equal charges (qi = q, for i = 1, 2, …, J), the condition (13) is satisfied for q < 0.035. Since the charge q has the dimension of mass from Equation (10), this condition translates to q < 0.19 in units of MP. Thus, the presence of many 4-form fields allows the possibility of realizing a small effective cosmological constant.
The idea of Bousso and Polchinski is based on the flux energy density originating from multiple 4-form fields. This idea was extended to the so-called flux compactification on a Calabi-Yau manifold in type II string theory. In the presence of fluxes, Kachru et al. [127] first set up a supersymmetric anti de Sitter (AdS) vacuum with all moduli fields fixed. Then, they obtained a de Sitter vacuum by adding an anti D3-brane in a warped geometry to lift up the AdS state.
There are hundreds of different 3-cycles on the Calabi-Yau manifold in the flux compactification. A macroscopic observer can view a 5-brane wrapping a 3-cycle as a 2-brane (membrane). The 5-brane can wrap any of these 3-cycles, which gives rise to hundreds of different membranes in four-dimensional space-time. The number of vacua appearing in string theory can be extremely large. For 500 three-cycles with each cycle wrapped by up to 10 fluxes, we have 10500 vacua.
The possible presence of such a large amount of vacua led to the notion of so-called string landscape [128]. This landscape includes so many possible configurations of local minima, among which our Universe may correspond to one of them. Each vacuum in the string landscape has different matter and coupling constant. The Standard Model is not predicted uniquely in this picture. The argument is that we may be able to find a vacuum with an extremely small energy density among 10500 vacua. However, this anthropic argument depends on “Those packed near Λ = 0 out of 10500 vacua describe particle phenomenology correctly, in particular with three chiral families and sin2 θW = 3/8,” otherwise the landscpe vacua differring by ΔΛ describe unacceptable universes. From this reasoning, the string landscape is commented in Table 1 as “not yet” established.
A general problem with the anthropic arguments is that they are often applied to a single parameter while fixing all the others. A parameter value that is ruled out in one case may be acceptable if something else is changed at the same time. In this sense, it is not clear that the anthropic arguments of Λ provide a satisfactory answer to the cosmological constant problem.
As commented before, the DE scale may be accountable from highly suppressed non-renormalizable terms in string-allowed discrete symmetries [44, 102] if the true vacuum has zero cosmological constant. In this sense, the theoretical solution toward the vanishing cosmological constant is more difficult to solve than obtaining a tiny DE scale on top of the vanishing cosmological constant [23, 26].
4. Inflation
The possibility of an exponential expansion of the Universe was known [129–133] even before the influential paper of Guth [45] which advocates diluting away the GUT scale monopoles [134]. For example, in the abstract of the Kazanas's paper [132], it is stated that “…In particular it is shown that under certain conditions this expansion law is exponential. It is further argued that under reasonable assumptions for the mass of the associated Higgs boson this expansion stage could last long enough to potentially account for the observed isotropy of the universe.” In the papers of Sato [130, 131], diluting away topological defects such as monopoles and domain walls was stressed after the advent of the modern GUT model [135, 136]. In the Guth's paper [45] it was clearly emphasized that the inflationary paradigm can address the solutions for the homogeneous, horizon and flatness problems.
The scalar field responsible for inflation is called “inflaton.” The inflaton field is a superposition of quanta of all possible wave lengths. A quantum fluctuating scale inflates exponentially and after passing the horizon, it is stretched exponentially with an almost scale-invariant form [137–141] and the frozen-scale still inflates exponentially (see [142] for a review). Different fluctuating scales go out of the horizon at different cosmic times and their exponentially stretched scales are correlated.
After the end of inflation, the quantum fluctuations enter the horizon again and become the sources of density perturbations. The prediction of nearly scale-invariant primordial perturbations generated during inflation was consistent with the temperature anisotropies of Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) observed by the COBE satellite [143]. The recent WMAP and the Planck data of CMB refined the temperature anisotropies to very high accuracy [1, 2]6.
The observables and the constraints implied by inflation are
A sufficient inflation, requiring the large e-fold number, Ne > 70, for addressing horizon and flatness problems.
The amplitude of temperature anisotropies δ T/T ≃ 10−5, for galaxy formation with CDM.
The spectral index of scalar perturbations ns ≃ 0.96, from WMAP and Planck data.
The tensor-to-scalar ratio r ≲ 0.2, from WMAP and Planck data.
The non-linear estimator of scalar non-Gaussianities for the local shape flocalNL = 2.7 ± 5.8 (68% CL), from Planck data.
As long as the slow-roll conditions are satisfied, the single-field inflationary scenario generally gives rise to local non-Gaussianities with |flocalNL| much smaller than 1 even for most general scalar-tensor theories with second order equations of motion [145–147]. Hence the slow-roll single-field models are consistent with the Planck bound of non-Gaussianities. Using the observational bounds of ns and r, we can distinguish between many single-field inflationary models [148–150]. For example, the self-coupling potential V(ϕ) = λ ϕ4/4 [151] and hybrid inflation [152] with ns > 1 are disfavored from the data.
The amplitude of tensor perturbations is given by Ph = 2H2/(π2M2P), so the detection of gravitational waves in CMB observations implies that the energy scale of inflation is directly known [153–157]. Since the B-mode polarization of CMB is generated by tensor perturbations but not by scalar perturbations, the B-mode detection is a smoking gun for the existence of primordial gravitational waves.
If the tensor-to-scalar ratio r is smaller than the order of 0.01, it is not easy to detect the CMB B-mode polarization.7 If r is detected in the range r > 0.05, then the energy scale during inflation corresponds to the GUT scale. The great interest in the announcement of r ~ 0.16 from the BICEP2 group [64] is because of the implication that the Universe once passed the vacuum energy scale of 1016 GeV. Even though the GUT scale MGUT is humongous from our TeV scale Standard Model, it is tiny from the point of gravity scale, the Planck mass MP. Because of the micro density perturbation, the vacuum energy at the scale (1016 GeV)4 leads to r ~ O(0.1). This phenomenon of the GUT scale energy density during inflation is usually parametrized by chaotic inflation with the potential V(ϕ)=12m2ϕ2 [151].
If a large r of order 0.2 is detected, the field value in the ϕ2 chaotic inflation is bounded from below, i.e., 〈ϕ〉 > 15MP, which is known as the “Lyth bound” [158]. This situation is shown in Figure 5, where the energy density at the inflationary epoch is the GUT scale. The field value 〈ϕ〉 > 15MP is trans-Planckian and the energy density at MP is tiny. So, one needs a fine-tuning in the ϕ2 chaotic inflation. Introducing a confining force at a GUT scale, a heavy axion for the inflaton with a potential bounded from above was proposed [159], which is called natural inflation. In this scenario, the energy density has the upper bound of order MGUT4 as shown in Figure 6A. One period of the inflaton in this case is of order MGUT, and hence the Lyth bound is violated. To remedy this, two confining forces are introduced with two heavy axions with the resulting potential [160],
The chaotic inflation with m2 ϕ2 [151]. The red bullet is the Lyth bound which is far above MP.
(A) The natural inflation of Freese et al. [159]; (B) The 2-flation [160]. The red bullet in the 2-flation is an O(1) value of 〈 a 〉/fa.
where α, β, γ, and δ are determined by the corresponding PQ symmetries of two heavy axions a1 and a2. Even though we allow O(1) couplings, the GUT mass scales can lead to MP with the probability of ~1%. With mass parameters of 50MGUT, we would obtain 50MP with the probability of ~1%. This is the Kim-Nilles-Peloso 2-flation model [160]. The probability of the 2-flation model with a large decay constant, i.e., fϕ >15MP to occur as shown in Figure 6B, is about 1%. The green-potential in Figure 6B is the other heavy axion potential. It can be generalized to N-flation [161].
The axionic topological defects in the anthropic window [25, 162] can be diluted away if inflation occurs below the anthropic window scale. With the GUT scale energy density during inflation, however, this dilution mechanism does not work. With the GUT energy scale inflation as implied by the BICEP2 [64], it could have pinned down to fa ~ 1011 GeV [119, 120], using the numerical calculation of radiating axions from axionic string-wall system [163]. In the numerical calculation, the Vilenkin-Everett mechanism [164] of erasing the horizon scale string has not been taken into account. In addition, the hidden-sector confining force can erase horizon scale axionic strings such that the QCD axion domain wall is not a serious cosmological problem [165]. The hidden-sector solution needs the hidden-sector domain-wall number of Nh = 1, which is possible in string compactification with an anomalous U(1) [166].
In addition to pinning down the upper bound on fa, the GUT scale inflation provokes a question, “What is the symmetry which naturally satisfies the Lyth bound [158]?” Lyth considered this problem with respect to the η parameter [167]. But, there exists a more fundamental question. In an ultra-violet completed theory such as string theory, every parameter is calculable. If we consider the ϕ2 chaotic inflation of Figure 5, there is a question, “Why do we neglect other terms?” In string theory, only discrete symmetries are permitted by the compactification process. For example, a term ϕ104/M100P can be possible if the discrete symmetries allow it. But with the trans-Planckian value, for example 〈 ϕ 〉 ~ 31, the coefficient must be tuned to 1 out of 10127, which is as bad as the cosmological constant problem.
Fortunately, there is another way for inflation to occur. We must choose the hilltop inflation, but sacrificing the single-field inflaton. It is not so bad in view of the fact that the 2-flation model already introduced two axions in the inflaton sector. Then, the inflating region is near origin such that the minimum at fDE is far away from the origin. In the region [0, fDE] the vacuum energy is of order M4GUT. This can be obtained from the condition on the quantum numbers of the assumed discrete symmetry [168]. The inflaton rolls in the yellow region in Figure 7 where the inflaton takes a green curve in the two-inflatons space.
The hilltop inflation [159]. The green bullet is the point whose effects are observed by the BICEP2 group.
5. Discussion
After the discovery of the fundamental Brout-Englert-Higgs boson, which is represented as Hu and Hd (= H†u in non − SUSY case), we reviewed the cosmological role of spin-0 bosons. This finding hints the possibility of numerous spin-0 bosons (ϕ) at the GUT scale. Spin-0 bosons at the GUT scale of the canonical dimension 1 can have more important effects to low energy physics compared to those of spin-12 fermions of the canonical dimension 32 (Dirac fermions ψ, ψ for example) at the GUT scale. For example, the spin-0 contribution
ϕ2nMP2n+2m−4(HdHu)m
dominates the fermion contribution ψnψ¯nMP3n+2m−4(HdHu)m for n, m ≥ 1. In addition, the existence of fundamental spin-0 bosons at the GUT scale may be extended to a larger symmetry: supersymmetric GUTs, or minimal supersymmetric Standard Models from string compactification. The interactions of the singlet fields only can take a SUSY superpotential, for example with GUT scale singlets ϕ and trans-Planckian singlets Φ for simplicity [168]
W=∑iϕaiMPai+ℓi−3Φℓi.
The rationale leading to the forms of Equations (15) and (16) are the discrete symmetries obtained from string compactification [44],8 which guarantees the absence of gravity obstruction of discrete symmetries, for example via wormholes [99]. The form of the interactionis (16) can lead to inflation with trans-Planckian decay constant with a multi-field hilltop potential, i.e., BCM2. The form of the interactionis (15) can lead to QCD axion via BCM1, and the DE scale via CCtmp. The fundamental scalars at the TeV, GUT and trans-Planckian scales allow all scenarios presented in Subsection 2.1. These are worked out on top of vanishing cosmological constant, which is assumed in any particle physics models. At present, we do not have any persuasive hint toward a theoretical solution of the vanishing cosmological constant. Any theory for the vanishing cosmological constant must satisfy the requirements of particle phenomenology we used in this review.
The fundamental scalars may be detectable if their couplings to gluons are appreciable. The front runner in the search of fundamental scalars hinting high energy (GUT or intermediate) scales is the QCD axion which couples to the gluon anomaly.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Jihn E. Kim is supported in part by the National Research Foundation (NRF) grant funded by the Korean Government (MEST) (No. 2005-0093841) and by the IBS (IBS-R017-D1-2014-a00), Yannis K. Semertzidis is supported by the IBS (IBS-R017-D1-2014-a00), and Shinji Tsujikawa is supported by the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from JSPS (No. 24540286).
ReferencesAdePARAghanimNArmitage-CaplanCArnaudMAshdownMAtrio-BarandelaF. (Planck Collaboration). Planck 2013 results XXII: constraints on inflation. (2013) [arXiv:1303.5082 [astro-ph.CO]].HinshawGLarsonDKomatsuESpergelDNBennettCLDunkleyJ. (WMAP Collaboration). Nine-Year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) observations: cosmological parameter results. . (2013) 208:19. 10.1088/0067-0049/208/2/19ZwickyF. Spectral displacement of extra galactic nebulae. (1933) 6:110.PreskillJWiseMBWilczekF. Cosmology of the invisible axion. (1983) 120:127–32. 10.1016/0370-2693(83)90637-8AbbottLFSikiviePA. Cosmological bound on the invisible axion. (1983) 120:133–6. 10.1016/0370-2693(83)90638-XDineMFischlerW. The not so harmless axion. (1983) 120:137–41. 10.1016/0370-2693(83)90639-1KimJE. Weak interaction singlet and strong CP invariance. (1979) 43:103–7. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.43.103ShifmanMAVainsteinVIZakharovVI. Can confinement ensure natural CP invariance of strong interactions?. (1980) 166:4933. 10.1016/0550-3213(80)90209-6ZhitnitskyAP. On possible suppression of the axion hadron interactions. (In Russian) . (1980) 31:497–504. Sov J Nucl Phys. 31:260.DineMFischlerWSrednickiM. A simple solution to the strong CP problem with a harmless axion. (1981) 104:199–202. 10.1016/0370-2693(81)90590-6KimJE. Light pseudoscalars, particle physics and cosmology. (1986) . 150:1–177. 10.1016/0370-1573(87)90017-2ChengH-Y. The strong CP problem revisited. (1988) . 158:1–89. 10.1016/0370-1573(88)90135-4PecceiRD. . In: JarlskogC., editors. Adv. Ser. Direct. High Energy Phys. Singapore: World Scientific (1989). p. 503–51.KimJECarosiG. Axions and the strong CP problem. . (2010) 82:557–602. 10.1103/RevModPhys.82.55715447249BaerHChoiK-YKimJERoszkowskiL. Dark matter production in the early Universe: beyond the thermal WIMP paradigm. [arXiv:1407.0017 [hep-ph]].SanhiVStarobinskyA. The case for a positive cosmological Λ term. (2000) 9:373–444. 10.1142/S0218271800000542PeeblesPRatraB. The cosmological constant and dark energy. . (2003) 75:559–606. 10.1103/RevModPhys.75.559PadmanabhanT. Cosmological constant: the weight of the vacuum. . (2003) 380:235–320. 10.1016/S0370-1573(03)00120-0CopelandEJSamiMTsujikawaS. Dynamics of dark energy. (2006) 15:1753–936. 10.1142/S021827180600942XSilvestriATroddenM. Approaches to understanding cosmic acceleration. . (2009) 72:096901. 10.1088/0034-4885/72/9/096901CaldwellRRKamionkowskiM. The physics of cosmic acceleration. . (2009) 59:397–429. 10.1146/annurev-nucl-010709-151330TsujikawaS. Dark energy: investigation and modeling. (2011) 370:331–402. 10.1007/978-90-481-8685-3-818785724WeinbergS. The cosmological constant problem. (1989) 61:1–23. 10.1103/RevModPhys.61.1WeinbergS. Anthropic bound on the cosmological constant. . (1987) 59:2607–10. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.59.260710035596TegmarkMAguirreAReesMWilczekF. Dimensionless constants, cosmology and other dark matters. (2006) 73:023505. 10.1103/PhysRevD.73.023505ZeeA. . Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press (2013).HawkingSW. The cosmological constant is probably zero. (1984) 134:403–4. 10.1016/0370-2693(84)91370-4KimJEKyaeBLeeHM. Randall-Sundrum model for selftuning the cosmological constant. . (2000) 86:4223–6. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.86.422311328140KimJE. Cosmological constant is probably adjustable in brane worlds. (2009) 81:123018. 10.1103/PhysRevD.81.123018KimJELangackerPLevineMWilliamsHH. A Theoretical and experimental review of the weak neutral current: a determination of its Structure and limits on deviations from the minimal SU(2)L × U(1) Electroweak Theory. . (1981) 53:211–52. 10.1103/RevModPhys.53.211LangackerPLuoM-X.. Implications of precision electroweak experiments for Mt, ρ0, sin2 θW and grand unification. (1991) 44:817–22. 10.1103/PhysRevD.44.81710013935KimJE. Z3 orbifold construction of SU(3)3 GUT with sin2θW0=38. (2003) 564:35–41. 10.1016/S0370-2693(03)00567-7KobayashiTRabySZhangR. Searching for realistic 4d string models with a Pati-Salam symmetry – Orbifold grand unified theories from heterotic string compactification on a Z6 orbifold. (2005) 704:3–55. 10.1016/j.nuclphysb.2004.10.035KimJEKyaeB. Flipped SU(5) from Z12-I orbifold with Wilson line. (2007) 770:47–82. 10.1016/j.nuclphysb.2007.02.008HuhJ-HKimJEKyaeB.SU(5)flip × SU(5)′ from Z12−I. (2009) 80:115012. 10.1103/PhysRevD.80.115012LebedevONillesHPRamo-SanchesSRabySRatzMVaudrevangePKS. A mini-landscape of exact MSSM spectra in heterotic orbifolds. (2007) 645:88–94. 10.1016/j.physletb.2006.12.012NillesHPRamo-SanchesSRatzMVaudrevangePKS. From strings to the MSSM. (2009) 59:249–67. 10.1140/epjc/s10052-008-0740-116364002PerlmutterSAlderingGGoldhaberGKnopARNugentPCastroPG. (Supernova Cosmology Project). Measurements of Ω and Λ from 42 High-Redshift Supernovae. . (1999) 517:565–86. 10.1086/307221Riess1AGFilippenkoAVChallisPClocchiattiADiercksAGarnavichPM. (Supernova Search Team). Observational evidence from supernovae for an accelerating universe and a cosmological constant. . (1998) 116:1009–38. 10.1086/300499MilgromMA. Modification of the Newtonian dynamics as a possible alternative to the hidden mass hypothesis. . (1983) 270:365–70. 10.1086/161130BeckensteinJMilgromM. Does the missing mass problem signal the breakdown of Newtonian gravity?. . (1984) 286:7–14. 10.1086/162570ZlatevIWangLStenhardtPJ. Quintessence, cosmic coincidence, and the cosmological constant. . (1998) 82:896–9. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.89614667314WetterichC. Cosmology and the fate of dilatation symmetry. (1988) 302:668–96. 10.1016/0550-3213(88)90193-9KimJENillesHP. Dark energy from approximate U(1)de symmetry. (2014) 730:53–8. 10.1016/j.physletb.2014.01.031GuthA. The inflationary universe: a possible solution to the Horizon and flatness problems. (1981) 23:347–56. 10.1103/PhysRevD.23.347LindeAD. A new inflationary universe scenario: a possible solution of the Horizon, flatness, homogeneity, isotropy and primordial monopole problems. (1982) 108:389–93. 10.1016/0370-2693(82)91219-9AlbrechtASteinhardtPJ. Cosmology for grand unified theories with radiatively induced symmetry breaking. . (1982) 48:1220–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.48.1220ColemanSRWeinbergEJ. Radiative corrections as the origin of spontaneous symmetry breaking. (1973) 7:1888–910. 10.1103/PhysRevD.7.1888AffleckIDineM. A new mechanism for baryogenesis. (1985) 249:361. 10.1016/0550-3213(85)90021-5KimJENillesHP. A quintessential axion. (2003) 553:1–6. 10.1016/S0370-2693(02)03148-9KimJE. Axion and almost massless quark as ingredients of quintessence. (1999) 9905:022. 10.1088/1126-6708/1999/05/022KimJE. Model dependent axion as quintessence with almost massless hidden sector quarks. (2000) 0006:016. 10.1088/1126-6708/2000/06/016KimJENillesHP. Axionic dark energy and a composite QCD axion. (2009) 0905:010. 10.1088/1475-7516/2009/05/010ChoiK. String or M theory axion as a quintessence. (2000) 62:043509. 10.1103/PhysRevD.62.043509SemertzidisY. . Geneva (2014).GoldstoneJ. Field theories with superconductor solutions. . (1961) 19:154–64. 10.1007/BF02812722HiggsPW. Broken symmetries, massless particles and gauge fields. (1964) 12:132–3. 10.1016/0031-9163(64)91136-9;HiggsPW. Broken symmetries and the masses of gauge bosons. . (1964) 13:508–9. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.13.508BroutREnglertF. Broken symmetry and the mass of gauge vector mesons. . (1964) 13:321–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.13.321GuralnikGSHagenCRKibbleTWB. Global conservation laws and massless particles. . (1964) 13:585–7. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.13.585SusskindL. Mass without scalars. (1979) 20:237–52. 10.1016/0550-3213(79)90364-XWeinbergS. Implications of dynamical symmetry breaking: an addendum. (1979) 19:1277–80. 10.1103/PhysRevD.19.1277WeinbergS. Implications of dynamical symmetry breaking: an addendum. (1976) 13:974–96. 10.1103/PhysRevD.13.974AdePARAikinRWBarkatsDBentonSJBischoffCABockJJ. (BICEP2 Collaboration). BICEP2 I: detection Of B-mode polarization at degree angular scales. . (2014) 112:241101. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.24110124996078CarrollSM. Quintessence and the rest of the world. . (1998) 81:3067–70. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.81.3067FujiiY. Origin of the gravitational constant and particle masses in scale invariant scalar–tensor theory. (1982) 26:2580–8. 10.1103/PhysRevD.26.2580FujiiYNishiokaT. Model of a decaying cosmological constant. (1990) 42:361–70. 10.1103/PhysRevD.42.36110012853FordLH. Cosmological constant damping by unstable scalar fields. (1987) 35:2339–44. 10.1103/PhysRevD.35.23399957933PeeblesPJERatraB. Cosmology with a time variable cosmological constant. . (1988) 325:L17. 10.1086/185100RatraBPeeblesPJE. Cosmological consequences of a rolling homogeneous scalar field. (1988) 37:3406–27. 10.1103/PhysRevD.37.34069958635ChibaTSugiyamaNNakamuraT. Cosmology with x matter. . (1997) 289:L5–9. 10.1093/mnras/289.2.L5ChibaTSugiyamaNNakamuraT. Observational tests of x matter models. . (1998) 301:72–80. 10.1046/j.1365-8711.1998.02012.xFerreiraPGJoyceM. Structure formation with a selftuning scalar field. . (1997) 79:4740–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.79.4740FerreiraPGJoyceM. Cosmology with a primordial scaling field. (1998) 58:023503. 10.1103/PhysRevD.58.023503CaldwellRRDaveRSteinhardtPJ. Cosmological imprint of an energy component with general equation of state. . (1998) 80:1582–5. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.80.1582CopelandEJLiddleARWandsD. Exponential potentials and cosmological scaling solutions. (1998) 57:4686–90. 10.1103/PhysRevD.57.4686FukugitaMTakaharaFYamashitaKYoshiiY. Test for the cosmological constant with the number count of faint galaxies. . (1990) 361:L1–4. 10.1086/185813GreenMBSchwarzJHWittenE. . Bonn: Cambridge University Press (1987).OliveKA. Inflation. . 190:347–403. 10.1016/0370-1573(90)90144-QZlatevIWangL-MSteinhardtPJ. Quintessence, cosmic coincidence, and the cosmological constant. . (1999) 82:896–9. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.89614667314SteinhardtPJWangL-MZlatevI. Cosmological tracking solutions. (1999) 59:123504. 10.1103/PhysRevD.59.123504BinetruyP. Models of dynamical supersymmetry breaking and quintessence. (1999) 60:063502. 10.1103/PhysRevD.60.063502CaldwellRRLinderEV. The limits of quintessence. . (2005) 95:141301. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.14130116241640AmendolaL. Scaling solutions in general nonminimal coupling theories. (1999) 60:043501. 10.1103/PhysRevD.60.043501KhouryJWeltmanA. Chameleon fields: awaiting surprises for tests of gravity in space. . (2004) 93:171104. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.93.17110415525066BransCDickeR. Mach's principle and a relativistic theory of gravitation. (1961) 124:925–35. 10.1103/PhysRev.124.925KhouryJWeltmanA. Chameleon cosmology. (2004) 69:044026. 10.1103/PhysRevD.69.044026HuWSawickiI. Models of f(R) cosmic acceleration that evade solar-system tests. (2007) 76:064004. 10.1103/PhysRevD.76.064004CapozzielloSTsujikawaS. Solar system and equivalence principle constraints on f(R) gravity by chameleon approach. (2008) 77:107501. 10.1103/PhysRevD.77.107501GannoujiRMoraesBMotaDPolarskiDTsujikawaSWintherH.Chameleon dark energy models with characteristic signatures. (2010) 82:124006. 10.1103/PhysRevD.82.124006SotiriouTPFaraoniV. f(R) theories of gravity. (2010) 82:451–97. 10.1103/RevModPhys.82.451De FeliceATsujikawaS.f(R) theories. . (2010) 13:3. 10.12942/lrr-2010-3VainshteinA. To the problem of nonvanishing gravitation mass. (1972) 39:393–4. 10.1016/0370-2693(72)90147-5DeffayetCEsposito-FareseGVikmanA.Covariant galileon. (2009) 79:084003. 10.1103/PhysRevD.79.084003NicolisARattazziRTrincheriniE. The Galileon as a local modification of gravity. (2009) 79:064036. 10.1103/PhysRevD.79.064036KimuraRKobayashiTYamamotoK. Vainshtein screening in a cosmological background in the most general second-order scalar-tensor theory. (2012) 85:024023. 10.1103/PhysRevD.85.024023De FeliceA.KaseRTsujikawaSVainshtein mechanism in second-order scalar-tensor theories. (2012) 85:044059. 10.1103/PhysRevD.85.044059KaseRTsujikawaSScreening the fifth force in the Horndeski's most general scalar-tensor theories. (2013) 1308:054. 10.1088/1475-7516/2013/08/054KimJE. Abelian discrete symmetries ZN and ZnR from string orbifolds. (2013) 726:450–5. 10.1016/j.physletb.2013.08.039DiasAGMachadoACBNishiCCRingwaldAVaudrevangePKS. The quest for an intermediate-scale accidental axion and further ALPs. (2014) 1406:037. 10.1007/JHEP06(2014)037KraussLMWilczekF. Discrete gauge symmetry in continuum theories. . (1989) 62:1221–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.62.122110039614KimJE. Modeling the small dark energy scale with a quintessential pseudoscalar boson. . (2014) 64:795–805. 10.3938/jkps.64.795BelavinAAPolyakovASchwartzATyupkinY. Pseudoparticle solutions of the Yang-Mills equations. (1975) 59:85–7. 10.1016/0370-2693(75)90163-X´t HooftG. How instantons solve the U(1) problem. . (1986) 142:357–87. 10.1016/0370-1573(86)90117-1WeinbergS. The U(1) problem. (1975) 11:3583–93. 10.1103/PhysRevD.11.3583WeinbergSWilczekF. . ClineD. B.MillsF. E., editors. London: Harwood Academic Publishers (1980).PecceiRDQuinnHR. CP conservation in the presence of instantons. . (1977) 38:1440–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.38.1440KimJE. Constraints on very light axions from cavity experiments. (1998) 58:05500610.1103/PhysRevD.58.055006ChoiKSKimIWKimJE. String compactification, QCD axion and axion-photon-photon coupling. (2007) 0703:116. 10.1088/1126-6708/2007/03/116KimJE. Calculation of axion-photon-photon coupling in string theory. (2014) 735:95–100. 10.1016/j.physletb.2014.06.021NomuraYWatariTYanagidaT. Quintessence axion potential induced by electroweak instanton effects. (2000) 484:103. 10.1016/S0370-2693(00)00605-5KamionkowskiMPradlerJWalkerDGE. Dark energy from string axiverse. [arXiv: 1409.0549[hep-ph]].ArvanitakiADimopoulosSDubovskySKaloperNMarch-RussellJ.String axiverse. (2010) 81:123530. 10.1103/PhysRevD.81.123530AmendolaLBarbieriR.Dark matter from an ultra-light pseudo-Goldsone-boson. (2006) 642:192–6. 10.1016/j.physletb.2006.08.069HuWBarkanaRGruzinovA. Cold and fuzzy dark matter. . (2000) 85:1158–61. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.85.115810991501SikivieP. Experimental tests of the invisible axion. . (1983) 51:1415–7. Erratum. 52:695 (1984). 10.1103/PhysRevLett.51.1415KraussLMoodyJWilczekFMorrisEB. Calculations for cosmic axion detection. . (1985) 55:1797–1800. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.55.179710031926HongJKimJENamSSemertzidisKY. Calculations of resonance enhancement factor in axion-search tube-experiments. (2014) [arXiv:1403.1576 [hep-ph]].MarshDJEGrinDHlozekRFerreiraPG. Tensor detection severely constrains axion dark matter. . (2014) 113:011801. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.01180125032918VissineliLGondoloP. Axion cold dark matter in view of BICEP2 results. . (2014) 113:011802. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.01180225032919MelissinosACDepanfilisSMoskowitzBERogersJTSemertzidisYKWuenschW. (Rochester-Brookhaven-Fermilab Collaboration). Limits on the abundance and coupling of cosmic axions at 4.5 < ma < 5.0 μeV. . (1987) 59:839. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.59.83910035884HagmannCSikiviePSullivanNSTannerDB(Florida Group). Results from a search for cosmic axions. (1990) 42:1297–1300. 10.1103/PhysRevD.42.1297ClarkeJ. Then and Now. (2010) 24:3999–4038. 10.1142/S0217979210056438ArvanitakiAGeraciAA. Resonant detection of axion mediated forces with nuclear magnetic resonance. [arXiv: 1403.1290 [hep-ph]].AdamRAdePARAghanimNArnaudMAumontJBaccigalupiC. (Planck Collaboration). Planck intermediate results, XXX: the angular power spectrum of polarized dust emission at intermediate and high galactic latitudes. (2014) arXiv: 1409.5738 [astro-ph.CO].BoussoRPolchinskiJ. Quantization of four form fluxes and dynamical neutralization of the cosmological constant. (2000) 0006:006. 10.1088/1126-6708/2000/06/006KachruSKalloshRLindeATrivediS. De Sitter vacua in string theory. (2003) 68:046005. 10.1103/PhysRevD.68.046005SusskindL. The anthropic landscape of string theory. In: CarrBJ, editors. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (2009) 247–266.LemaitreG. (1933) 47A:49 [English in Gen. Rel. Grav. (1997) 29:641.SatoK. Cosmological baryon number domain structure and the first order phase transition of a vacuum. (1981) 99:66–70. 10.1016/0370-2693(81)90805-4SatoK. First order phase transition of a vacuum and expansion of the universe. . (1981) 195:467–79.KazanasD. Dynamics of the universe and spontaneous symmetry breaking. . (1980) 241:L59–63. 10.1086/183361StarobinskyAA. A new type of isotropic cosmological models without singularity. (1980) 91:99–102. 10.1016/0370-2693(80)90670-XPreskillJ. Cosmological production of superheavy magnetic monopoles. . (1979) 43:1365–8. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.43.136511607395GeorgiHGlashowSL. Unity of all elementary particle forces. . (1974) 32:438–41. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.32.43814611515PatiJSalamA. Unified lepton-hadron symmetry and a gauge theory of the basic interactions. (1973) 8:1240–51. 10.1103/PhysRevD.8.1240MukhanovVFChibisovGV. Quantum fluctuation and nonsingular universe (In Russian). . (1981) 33:549–53 [JETP Lett. (1981) 33:532–535].HawkingSW. The development of irregularities in a single bubble inflationary universe. (1982) 115:295–7. 10.1016/0370-2693(82)90373-2StarobinskyAA. Dynamics of phase transition in the new inflationary universe scenario and generation of perturbations. (1982) 117:175–8. 10.1016/0370-2693(82)90541-XGuthAHPiS-Y. Fluctuations in the new inflationary universe. . (1982) 49:1110–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.49.1110BardeenJSteinhardtPTurnerM. Spontaneous creation of almost scale - free density perturbations in an inflationary universe. (1983) 28:679. 10.1103/PhysRevD.28.679BassettBTsujikawaSWandsD. Inflation dynamics and reheating. . (2006) 78:537–89. 10.1103/RevModPhys.78.53723862990SmootGFBennettCLKogutAWrightELAymonJBoggessNW. Structure in the COBE differential microwave radiometer first year maps. . (1992) 396:L1–5. 10.1086/186504TurnerMS. Bonn: University Bonn (2014).CreminelliPZaldarriagaM. Single field consistency relation for the 3-point function. (2004) 0410:006. 10.1088/1475-7516/2004/10/006ChenXHuangMKachruSShiuG. Observational signatures and non-Gaussianities of general single field inflation. (2007) 0701:002. 10.1088/1475-7516/2007/01/002De FeliceA.TsujikawaS.Shapes of primordial non-Gaussianities in the Horndeski's most general scalar-tensor theories. (2013) 1303:030. 10.1088/1475-7516/2013/03/030AdePARAghanimNArmitage-CaplanCArnaudMAshdownMAtrio-BarandelaF. Planck 2013 results. XXII. Constraints on inflation. [arXiv:1303.5082 [astro-ph.CO]].TsujikawaSOhashiJKuroyanagiSDe FeliceA.Planck constraints on single-field inflation. (2013) 88:023529. 10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023529TsujikawaS. Distinguishing between inflationary models from cosmic microwave background. (2014) 6:06B104. 10.1093/ptep/ptu04718518270LindeAD. Chaotic inflation. (1983) 129:177–81. 10.1016/0370-2693(83)90837-7LindeAD. Hybrid inflation. (1994) 49:748–54. 10.1103/PhysRevD.49.74810017031GrishchukLP. Amplification of gravitational waves in an istropic universe. . (1974) 67:825–38 [Sov. Phys. J. Exp. Theor. Phys. (1975) 40:409–15]StarobinskyAA. Spectrum of relict gravitational radiation and the early state of the universe. . (1979) 30:719–23 [JETP Lett. (1979) 30:682–85].RubakovVASazhinMVVeryaskinAV. Graviton creation in the inflationary universe and the grand unification scale. (1982) 115:189–92. 10.1016/0370-2693(82)90641-4FabbriRPollockMD. The effect of primordially produced gravitons upon the anisotropy of the cosmological microwave background radiation. (1983) 125:445–8. 10.1016/0370-2693(83)91322-9AbbottLFWiseMB. Constraints on generalized inflationary cosmologies. (1984) 244:541–8. 10.1016/0550-3213(84)90329-8LythDH. What would we learn by detecting a gravitational wave signal in the cosmic microwave background anisotropy?. . (1997) 78:1861–3. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.78.1861FreeseKFriemanJAOrlintoAV. Natural inflation with pseudo Nambu–Goldstone bosons. . (1990) 65:3233–6. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.65.323310042817KimJENillesHPPelosoM. Completing natural inflation. (2005) 0501:005. 10.1088/1475-7516/2005/01/005DimopoulosSKachruSMcGreevyJWackerJG. N-flation. (2008) 0808:003. 10.1088/1475-7516/2008/08/003PiS-Y. Inflation without tears. . (1984) 52:1725–8. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.52.1725HiramatsuTKawasakiMSaikawaKSekiguchiT. Axion cosmology with long-lived domain walls. (2012) 85:105020. 10.1088/1475-7516/2013/01/001VilenkinAEverettAE. Cosmic strings and domain walls in models with Goldstone and PseudoGoldstone bosons. . (1982) 48:1867–70. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.48.1867BarrSMKimJE. New confining force solution of QCD domain wall problem. (2014) [arXiv:1407.4311 [hep-ph]].KimJE. High scale inflation, model-independent string axion, and QCD axion with domain wall number one. (2014) 734:68–71. 10.1016/j.physletb.2014.05.033LythDH. BICEP2, the curvature perturbation and supersymmetry. [arXiv:1403.7323 [hep-ph]]KimJE. The inflation point in U(1)de hilltop potential assisted by chaoton, BICEP2 data, and trans-Planckian decay constant. (2014) 737:1–5. 10.1016/j.physletb.2014.08.025
1However, the scalar in this case is composite.
2For this specific form, one needs fine-tunings between domain wall number one, two, and three terms in the potential.
3http://capp.ibs.re.kr/html/capp_en/
4http://www.ibs.re.kr/eng.do/
5We note that the recent Planck-dust report extrapolated to the BICEP2 field gives the dust contribution similar to r ≈ 2 without the dust contribution [125].
6From the Planck data the existence of CDM was also confirmed (by 7 σ [144]) better than any other data.
7However, the future observations like LiteBIRD may reach this range.
8See, also, the discrete gauge symmetries in the field theory language [101].