McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics
Informal Pizza Seminar

A Small Cosmological Constant from Warped Compactification with Branes

Hassan Firouzjahi

McGill

The talk is based on the work hep-ph/0012090. We present a possible explanation for the smallness of the observed cosmological constant using a variant of the Randall-Sundrum(RS)-Goldberger-Wise paradigm for a warped extra dimension. In contrast to RS, we imagine that we are living on the positive tension Planck brane, or on a zero-tension TeV brane. In our model there are two solutions for the scalar field in the bulk and the corresponding brane seperations, one of which is tuned to have zero cosmological constant. We show that in the other solution, which is a false vaccum state, the 4-D cosmological constant can be naturally small, due to exponential suppression by the warp factor. The radion is in the milli-eV mass range, and if we live on a TeV brane its couplings are large enough that it can measurably alter the gravitational force at submillimeter distances. In this case the Kaluza-Klein excitations of the graviton can also contribute to submillimeter deviations from Newtonian gravity.

Tuesday, January 23rd 2001, 13:15
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, room 326