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How Heavy Can Moduli Be?

Mehrdad Mirbabayi, Giovanni Villadoro

Abstract

In Kaluza-Klein (KK) compactification of gravitational theories, moduli fields, which are scalar fields associated to the deformations of the compact manifold, are typically lighter than the KK gravitons. However, a universal limit on their mass does not seem to exist. We provide numerical evidence that a light scalar particle, with mass ratio to the first KK graviton $(m_{\rm sc}/m_{1KK})^2 \leq {4/3}$, is necessary for the consistency of the $4d$ effective theory of KK gravitons. This can be interpreted as a limit on how rigidly the compact manifold can be stabilized.

How Heavy Can Moduli Be?

Abstract

In Kaluza-Klein (KK) compactification of gravitational theories, moduli fields, which are scalar fields associated to the deformations of the compact manifold, are typically lighter than the KK gravitons. However, a universal limit on their mass does not seem to exist. We provide numerical evidence that a light scalar particle, with mass ratio to the first KK graviton , is necessary for the consistency of the effective theory of KK gravitons. This can be interpreted as a limit on how rigidly the compact manifold can be stabilized.
Paper Structure (7 sections, 32 equations)

This paper contains 7 sections, 32 equations.