Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2017-05-05 12:30 to 2017-05-09 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 19th, 10:30 am.
We demonstrate that the approximation for the number of inflationary e-folds commonly used in the literature can lead to highly inaccurate predictions for the amplitude of primordial gravitational waves. We show that such an approximation can lead to perfectly viable inflation models being falsely ruled out by direct or indirect gravitational-wave measurements. We illustrate this point using a new class of inflation models which include the power-law potential as the simplest limit. These models are simple to construct without using the slow-roll approximation, and are consistent with constraints from Planck. Crucially, these models may suffer from an order-of-magnitude error in the prediction for the gravitational-wave amplitude if the common definition of e-folding is used. Our findings have strong implications for the classes of inflation models that can be ruled out by future space-based laser interferometers such as BBO and DECIGO.
GPS, an excellent tool for geodesy, may serve also particle physics. In the presence of Earth's magnetic field, a GPS photon may be transformed into an axion. The proposed experimental setup involves the transmission of a GPS signal from a satellite to another satellite, both in low orbit around the Earth. To increase the accuracy of the experiment, we evaluate the influence of Earth's gravitational field on the whole quantum phenomenon. There is a significant advantage in our proposal. While geomagnetic field B is low, the magnetized length L is very large, resulting into a scale (BL)^2 orders of magnitude higher than existing or proposed reaches. The transformation of the GPS photons into axion particles will result in a dimming of the photons and even to a "light shining through the Earth" phenomenon.