Observations indicate that intergalactic magnetic fields have amplitudes of the order of similar to 10(-6) G and are uniform on scales of similar to 10 kpc. Despite their wide presence in the Universe, their origin remains an open issue. Even by invoking a dynamo mechanism or a compression effect for magnetic field amplification, the existence of seed fields before galaxy formation is still problematic. General Relativity predicts an adiabatic decrease of the magnetic field evolving as vertical bar B vertical bar proportional to 1/a(2), where a is the scale factor of the Universe. It results in very small primordial fields, unless the conformal symmetry of the electromagnetic sector is broken. In this paper, we study the possibility that a natural mechanism for the amplification of primordial magnetic field can be related to extended teleparallel gravity f(T, B) models, where T is the torsion scalar, and B the boundary term. In particular, we consider a non-minimal coupling with gravity in view to break conformal symmetry in a teleparallel background, investigating, in particular, the role of boundary term B, which can be consider as a further scalar field. We find that, after solving exactly the f( T, B) field equations both in inflation and reheating eras, a non-adiabatic behavior of the magnetic field is always possible, and a strong amplification appears in the reheating epoch. We also compute the ratio r = rho(B)/rho gamma between the magnetic energy density and the cosmic microwave energy density during inflation, in order to explain the present value r similar or equal to 1, showing that, in the slow-roll approximation, power-law teleparallel theories with B-n have effects indistinguishable from metric theories R-n where R is the Ricci curvature scalar.

The amplification of cosmological magnetic fields in extended f(T,B) teleparallel gravity

A. Carleo
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
G. Lambiase
Membro del Collaboration Group
2022-01-01

Abstract

Observations indicate that intergalactic magnetic fields have amplitudes of the order of similar to 10(-6) G and are uniform on scales of similar to 10 kpc. Despite their wide presence in the Universe, their origin remains an open issue. Even by invoking a dynamo mechanism or a compression effect for magnetic field amplification, the existence of seed fields before galaxy formation is still problematic. General Relativity predicts an adiabatic decrease of the magnetic field evolving as vertical bar B vertical bar proportional to 1/a(2), where a is the scale factor of the Universe. It results in very small primordial fields, unless the conformal symmetry of the electromagnetic sector is broken. In this paper, we study the possibility that a natural mechanism for the amplification of primordial magnetic field can be related to extended teleparallel gravity f(T, B) models, where T is the torsion scalar, and B the boundary term. In particular, we consider a non-minimal coupling with gravity in view to break conformal symmetry in a teleparallel background, investigating, in particular, the role of boundary term B, which can be consider as a further scalar field. We find that, after solving exactly the f( T, B) field equations both in inflation and reheating eras, a non-adiabatic behavior of the magnetic field is always possible, and a strong amplification appears in the reheating epoch. We also compute the ratio r = rho(B)/rho gamma between the magnetic energy density and the cosmic microwave energy density during inflation, in order to explain the present value r similar or equal to 1, showing that, in the slow-roll approximation, power-law teleparallel theories with B-n have effects indistinguishable from metric theories R-n where R is the Ricci curvature scalar.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11386/4818248
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