On the quantum stability of Q-balls
arXiv:1310.7487 · doi:10.1007/JHEP04(2014)184
Abstract
We consider the evolution and decay of Q-balls under the influence of quantum fluctuations. We argue that the most important effect resulting from these fluctuations is the modification of the effective potential in which the Q-ball evolves. This is in addition to spontaneous decay into elementary particle excitations and fission into smaller Q-balls previously considered in the literature, which -- like most tunnelling processes -- are likely to be strongly suppressed. We illustrate the effect of quantum fluctuations in a particular model $Ï^6$ potential, for which we implement the inhomogeneous Hartree approximation to quantum dynamics and solve for the evolution of Q-balls in 3+1 dimensions. We find that the stability range as a function of (field space) angular velocity $Ï$ is modified significantly compared to the classical case, so that small-$Ï$ Q-balls are less stable than in the classical limit, and large-$Ï$ Q-balls are more stable. This can be understood qualitatively in a simple way.
JHEP format, 17+1 pages, 9 figures; v2: improvements to several figures, text rewritten to improve legibility, conclusions unchanged, published in JHEP