4.6 Article

Cosmological consequences of nearly conformal dynamics at the TeV scale

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2011/12/009

Keywords

physics of the early universe; cosmological phase transitions; cosmology of theories beyond the SM; cosmological applications of theories with extra dimensions

Funding

  1. ERC [204072]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [204072] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Nearly conformal dynamics at the TeV scale as motivated by the hierarchy problem can be characterized by a stage of significant supercooling at the electroweak epoch. This has important cosmological consequences. In particular, a common assumption about the history of the universe is that the reheating temperature is high, at least high enough to assume that TeV-mass particles were once in thermal equilibrium. However, as we discuss in this paper, this assumption is not well justified in some models of strong dynamics at the TeV scale. We then need to reexamine how to achieve baryogenesis in these theories as well as reconsider how the dark matter abundance is inherited. We argue that baryonic and dark matter abundances can be explained naturally in these setups where reheating takes place by bubble collisions at the end of the strongly first-order phase transition characterizing conformal symmetry breaking,even if the reheating temperature is below the electroweak scale similar to 100 GeV. In particular, non-thermal production of heavy WIMPs during bubble collisions becomes a well-motivated possibility. We also discuss inflation as well as gravity wave smoking gun signatures of this class of models.

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