English

Gravitational waves from deflagration bubbles in first-order phase transitions

Astrophysics 2008-11-26 v3 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

The walls of bubbles in a first-order phase transition can propagate either as detonations, with a velocity larger than the speed of sound, or deflagrations, which are subsonic. We calculate the gravitational radiation that is produced by turbulence during a phase transition which develops via deflagration bubbles. We take into account the fact that a deflagration wall is preceded by a shock front which distributes the latent heat throughout space and influences other bubbles. We show that turbulence can induce peak values of ΩGW\Omega_{GW} as high as 109\sim 10^{-9}. We discuss the possibility of detecting at LISA gravitational waves produced in the electroweak phase transition with wall velocities vw101v_w\lesssim 10^{-1}, which favor electroweak baryogenesis.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0804.0391,
  title  = {Gravitational waves from deflagration bubbles in first-order phase transitions},
  author = {Ariel Megevand},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0804.0391},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

13 pages, 1 figure; calculations of section IV repeated using recent results for the GW spectrum from turbulence, comments added in all sections, references added, conclusions unchanged

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:27:03.868Z