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91探花
Theoretical physicists working at a blackboard collaboration pod in the Beecroft building.
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Professor Joseph Conlon

Professor of Theoretical Physics

Research theme

  • Particle astrophysics & cosmology
  • Fundamental particles and interactions
  • Fields, strings, and quantum dynamics

Sub department

  • Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics

Research groups

  • Particle theory
Joseph.Conlon@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73608
Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, room 60.10
  • About
  • Publications

Percolating Cosmic String Networks from Kination

(2024)

Authors:

Joseph P Conlon, Edmund J Copeland, Edward Hardy, Noelia S谩nchez Gonz谩lez

String Theory and the Early Universe: Constraints and Opportunities

ArXiv 2405.19118 (2024)

Out of the dark: WISPs in String Theory and the Early Universe

Proceedings of 1st General Meeting and 1st Training School of the COST Action COSMIC WISPers Sissa Medialab Srl 454 (2024) 001

Abstract:

New light hidden sector degrees of freedom represent one of the most approaches to going beyond the Standard Model. I give a short account of how such WISP candidates naturally appear in string compactifications and some descriptions of ways that they can affect early universe cosmology.

Out of the Dark: WISPs in String Theory and the Early Universe

(2024)

String cosmology: from the early universe to today

Physics Reports Elsevier 1059 (2024) 1-155

Authors:

Michele Cicoli, Joseph P Conlon, Anshuman Maharana, Susha Parameswaran, Fernando Quevedo, Ivonne Zavala

Abstract:

We review applications of string theory to cosmology, from primordial times to the present-day accelerated expansion. Starting with a brief overview of cosmology and string compactifications, we discuss in detail moduli stabilisation, inflation in string theory, the impact of string theory on post-inflationary dynamics (reheating, moduli domination, kination), dark energy (the cosmological constant from a string landscape and models of quintessence) and various alternative scenarios (string/brane gases, the pre big-bang scenario, rolling tachyons, ekpyrotic/cyclic cosmologies, bubbles of nothing, S-brane and holographic cosmologies). The state of the art in string constructions is described in each topic and, where relevant, connections to swampland conjectures are made. The possibilities for novel particles and excitations (axions, moduli, cosmic strings, branes, solitons, oscillons and boson stars) are emphasised. Implications for the physics of the CMB, gravitational waves, dark matter and dark radiation are discussed along with potential observational signatures.

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