Abstract
Models of particle physics that feature phase transitions typically provide predictions for stochastic gravitational wave signals at future detectors and such predictions are used to delineate portions of the model parameter space that can be constrained. The question is: how precise are such predictions? Uncertainties enter in the calculation of the macroscopic thermal parameters and the dynamics of the phase transition itself. We calculate such uncertainties with increasing levels of sophistication in treating the phase transition dynamics. Currently, the highest level of diligence corresponds to careful treatments of the source lifetime; mean bubble separation; going beyond the bag model approximation in solving the hydrodynamics equations and explicitly calculating the fraction of energy in the fluid from these equations rather than using a fit; and including fits for the energy lost to vorticity modes and reheating effects. The lowest level of diligence incorporates none of these effects. We compute the percolation and nucleation temperatures, the mean bubble separation, the fluid velocity, and ultimately the gravitational wave spectrum corresponding to the level of highest diligence for three explicit examples: SMEFT, a dark sector Higgs model, and the real singlet-extended Standard Model (xSM). In each model, we contrast different levels of diligence in the calculation and find that the difference in the final predicted signal can be several orders of magnitude. Our results indicate that calculating the gravitational wave spectrum for particle physics models and deducing precise constraints on the parameter space of such models continues to remain very much a work in progress and warrants care.
Highlights
In the standard model of particle physics, there is no mechanism for such a gravitational wave background to be produced
We compute the percolation and nucleation temperatures, the mean bubble separation, the fluid velocity, and the gravitational wave spectrum corresponding to the level of highest diligence for three explicit examples: Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT), a dark sector Higgs model, and the real singlet-extended Standard Model
Our results indicate that calculating the gravitational wave spectrum for particle physics models and deducing precise constraints on the parameter space of such models continues to remain very much a work in progress and warrants care
Summary
Gravitational waves produced from first order phase transitions is a finite temperature tunneling process, from some false vacuum to the true vacuum. Bubbles of the true phase begin to form at some critical radius where the pressure is strong enough to cause expansion. The probability of such bubbles forming increases as the Universe cools, until the nucleation temperature at which there is an average of one bubble per Hubble volume. Below this temperature is the percolation temperature at which bubble collisions are occurring and the final temperature when the phase transition ends. We will proceed to analyze the different level of diligence used in the literature
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