Long-lived pseudo-solitonic objects, known as oscillons/oscillatons, which we collectively call real scalar stars, are ubiquitous in early Universe cosmology of scalar field theories. Typical examples are axions stars and moduli stars. Using numerical simulations in full general relativity to include the effects of gravity, we study the fate of real scalar stars and find that depending on the scalar potential they are either meta-stable or collapse to black holes. In particular we find that for KKLT potentials the configurations are meta-stable despite the asymmetry of the potential, consistently with the results from lattice simulations that do not include gravitational effects. For alpha-attractor potentials collapse to black holes is pos...
We study critical behavior in the collapse of massive spherically symmetric scalar fields. We observ...
International audienceGravastars are configurations of compact singularity-free gravitational object...
The classical equations of motion for an axion with potential V(phgr)=ma2fa2 [1−cos (phgr/fa)] posse...
Long-lived pseudo-solitonic objects, known as oscillons/oscillatons, which we collectively call real...
We present numerical-relativity simulations of spherically symmetric core collapse and compact-objec...
Using numerical relativity simulations we study the dynamics of pseudo-topological objects called os...
We present a class of general relativistic soliton-like solutions composed of multiple minimally cou...
We present an exhaustive analysis of the numerical evolution of the Einstein-Klein-Gordon equations ...
Extensions to general relativity are often considered as possibilities in the quest for a quantum th...
Spherically symmetric oscillatons (also referred to as oscillating soliton stars) i.e. gravitationa...
We study the interaction of massless scalar fields with relativistic stars by means of fully dynamic...
International audienceIn a subclass of scalar-tensor theories, it has been shown that standard gener...
Aims. We study cosmological models in scalar tensor theories of gravity with power-law potentials as...
Oscillons are localized, non-singular, time-dependent, spherically-symmetric solutions of nonlinear ...
We consider k-essence, a scalar-tensor theory with first-order derivative self-interactions that can...
We study critical behavior in the collapse of massive spherically symmetric scalar fields. We observ...
International audienceGravastars are configurations of compact singularity-free gravitational object...
The classical equations of motion for an axion with potential V(phgr)=ma2fa2 [1−cos (phgr/fa)] posse...
Long-lived pseudo-solitonic objects, known as oscillons/oscillatons, which we collectively call real...
We present numerical-relativity simulations of spherically symmetric core collapse and compact-objec...
Using numerical relativity simulations we study the dynamics of pseudo-topological objects called os...
We present a class of general relativistic soliton-like solutions composed of multiple minimally cou...
We present an exhaustive analysis of the numerical evolution of the Einstein-Klein-Gordon equations ...
Extensions to general relativity are often considered as possibilities in the quest for a quantum th...
Spherically symmetric oscillatons (also referred to as oscillating soliton stars) i.e. gravitationa...
We study the interaction of massless scalar fields with relativistic stars by means of fully dynamic...
International audienceIn a subclass of scalar-tensor theories, it has been shown that standard gener...
Aims. We study cosmological models in scalar tensor theories of gravity with power-law potentials as...
Oscillons are localized, non-singular, time-dependent, spherically-symmetric solutions of nonlinear ...
We consider k-essence, a scalar-tensor theory with first-order derivative self-interactions that can...
We study critical behavior in the collapse of massive spherically symmetric scalar fields. We observ...
International audienceGravastars are configurations of compact singularity-free gravitational object...
The classical equations of motion for an axion with potential V(phgr)=ma2fa2 [1−cos (phgr/fa)] posse...