Gravitational radiation from colliding vacuum bubbles

Arthur Kosowsky, Michael S. Turner, and Richard Watkins
Phys. Rev. D 45, 4514 – Published 15 June 1992
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Abstract

In the linearized-gravity approximation we numerically compute the amount of gravitational radiation produced by the collision of two true-vacuum bubbles in Minkowski space. The bubbles are separated by distance d and we calculate the amount of gravitational radiation that is produced in a time τ∼d (in a cosmological phase transition τ corresponds to the duration of the transition, which is expected to be of the order of the mean bubble separation d). Our approximations are generally valid for τ≲H1. We find that the amount of gravitational radiation produced depends only upon the grossest features of the collision: the time τ and the energy density associated with the false-vacuum state, ρvac. In particular, the spectrum dEGW/dω∝ρvac2τ6 and peaks at a characteristic frequency ωmax≃3.8/τ, and the fraction of the vacuum energy released into gravitational waves is about 1.3×103(τ/H1)2, where H2=8πGρvac/3 (τ/H1 is expected to be of the order of a few percent). We address in some detail the important symmetry issues in the problem, and how the familiar ‘‘quadrupole approximation’’ breaks down in a most unusual way: it overestimates the amount of gravitational radiation produced in this highly relativistic situation by more than a factor of 50. Most of our results are for collisions of bubbles of equal size, though we briefly consider the collision of vacuum bubbles of unequal size. Our work implies that the vacuum-bubble collisions associated with strongly first-order phase transition are a very potent cosmological source of gravitational radiation.

  • Received 20 December 1991

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.45.4514

©1992 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Arthur Kosowsky, Michael S. Turner, and Richard Watkins

  • NASA/Fermilab Astrophysics Center, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, Illinois 60510-0500
  • Departments of Physics and Astronomy Astrophysics, Enrico Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637-1433

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Vol. 45, Iss. 12 — 15 June 1992

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