Bianchi-I Cosmology with Radiation in Asymptotically Safe Gravity
Chiang-Mei Chen, Ting-Kui Fan, Rituparna Mandal, Nobuyoshi Ohta
TLDR
This paper explores anisotropic Bianchi-I cosmology with radiation and magnetic fields in asymptotically safe gravity, analyzing late-time evolution and approach to isotropy.
Key contributions
- Classical Bianchi-I with radiation shows slow approach to isotropy due to logarithmic terms.
- Quantum effects soften intermediate anisotropy in radiation-dominated Bianchi-I cosmology.
- With magnetic fields, quantum effects enhance expansion, leading to persistent Kasner-type anisotropy.
- Nonzero classical cosmological constant ensures an isotropic de Sitter phase at late times.
Why it matters
This research sheds light on the late-time behavior of anisotropic universes, incorporating quantum gravity effects. It provides crucial insights into how radiation and magnetic fields influence cosmic evolution and the eventual approach to isotropy or persistent anisotropy.
Original Abstract
We study the late-time evolution of an anisotropic Bianchi-I universe with radiation in the framework of asymptotically safe gravity. We first discuss the radiation-dominated universe for the perfect fluid with the equation of state $p=ρ/3$, and find that the classical evolution involves logarithmic terms, which lead to a slow approach toward isotropy. The quantum effects introduce subleading corrections that soften the anisotropy in the intermediate stage. Next we discuss the universe with magnetic fields. For a vanishing classical cosmological constant, we find that the universe in general evolves toward a Kasner-type regime with persistent anisotropy while the expansion rate is enhanced by quantum effects, leading to a faster decay of the magnetic field. In contrast, for a nonzero classical cosmological constant, the late-time dynamics are dominated by the cosmological constant, and the universe asymptotically approaches an isotropic de Sitter phase with exponential decay of both anisotropies and the magnetic field. Finally, we employ Hodge duality to demonstrate that these cosmological findings apply equally to environments dominated by electric fields.
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