Metastable cosmic strings are broken at the start
Abstract
We show that metastable cosmic strings break at early times, either via finite-temperature effects or by attaching to pre-existing monopoles during network percolation. The resulting segments can be initially super-horizon in size and thus persist for a significant amount of time. If the strings do not re-percolate, the network's eventual destruction is typically due to this early-time breaking rather than late-time quantum tunnelling. Survival of strings to epochs probed by NANOGrav requires , where and are the monopole mass and the string tension respectively, over an order of magnitude larger than previous estimates. We also revisit quantum-tunnelling induced breaking. Results from numerical simulations suggest that this occurs mainly at rare high-tension points on the strings, yielding a rate much larger than is usually assumed. We briefly discuss the related scenario of flux tubes in a dark QCD-like hidden sector with dark-quark masses above the confinement scale.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2601.04320,
title = {Metastable cosmic strings are broken at the start},
author = {Lorenzo Tranchedone and Ethan Carragher and Edward Hardy and Natálie Koscelanská van IJcken},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2601.04320},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
32+4 pages, 9 figures