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Stasis, stasis, triple stasis: A theoretical study of cosmological stasis
Abstract
Many theories of physics beyond the Standard Model predict the existence of large or infinite towers of decaying states. In a previous paper [K. R. Dienes et al., Phys. Rev. D 105, 023530 (2022)PRVDAQ2470-0010], we pointed out that this can give rise to a surprising cosmological phenomenon that we dubbed "stasis"during which the relative abundances of matter and radiation remain constant across extended cosmological eras even though the universe is expanding. Indeed, such stasis epochs are universal attractors, with the universe necessarily entering (and later exiting) such epochs for a wide variety of initial conditions. Matter/radiation stasis is therefore an important and potentially unavoidable feature of many BSM cosmologies. In this paper we extend our arguments to universes containing significant amounts of vacuum energy, and demonstrate that such universes also give rise to various forms of stasis between vacuum energy and either matter or radiation. We also demonstrate the existence of several forms of "triple stasis"during which the abundances of matter, radiation, and vacuum energy all simultaneously remain fixed despite cosmological expansion. We further describe several close variants of stasis which we call "quasi-stasis"and "oscillatory stasis,"and discuss the circumstances under which each of these can arise. Finally, we develop a general formalism for understanding the emergence of stasis within BSM cosmologies irrespective of the number or type of different energy components involved. Taken together, these results greatly expand the range of theoretical and phenomenological possibilities for the physics of the early universe, introducing new types of cosmological eras which may play an intrinsic and potentially inevitable role within numerous BSM cosmologies.
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