学术活动

西南理论物理中心系列报告:Stasis in an Expanding Universe:Overview, Concrete Realizations, and Observational Consequences

作者:点击次数:更新时间:2023年10月18日

  目: Stasis in an Expanding Universe:Overview, Concrete Realizations, and Observational Consequences

报告人: Fei Huang  博士后  Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS)

  间: 20231019号(星期四)上午1000

  点: 玉骨遥LE201

邀请人: 边立功

报告摘要:One signature of an expanding universe is the time-variation of the cosmological abundances of its different components. For example, a radiation-dominated universe inevitably gives way to a matter-dominated universe, and critical moments such as matter-radiation equality are fleeting. In this talk, we point out that this lore is not always correct, and that it is possible to obtain a form of stasisin which the relative cosmological abundances \Omega_i of the different components remain unchanged over extended cosmological epochs, even as the universe expands. Moreover, we demonstrate that such situations are not fine-tuned, but are actually global attractors within certain cosmological frameworks, with the universe naturally evolving towards such long-lasting periods of stasis for a wide variety of initial conditions. The existence of this kind of stasis therefore gives rise to a host of new theoretical possibilities across the entire cosmological timeline, ranging from potential implications for primordial density perturbations, dark-matter production, and structure formation all the way to early reheating, early matter-dominated eras, and even the age of the Universe.

报告人介绍:Dr. Fei Huang is a postdoc at the Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS). He received his PhD in theoretical high energy physics from the University of Arizona in 2019. He then worked as a postdoc in the Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Science and the University of California, Irvine from 2019 to 2022, before joining WIS. His primary interest focuses on dark-matter phenomenology and early-universe cosmology, especially new ideas in these fields beyond the traditional paradigm.