The standard vacuum bounce formalism suffers from inconsistencies when applied to thermal bubble nucleation, for which ad hoc workarounds are commonly adopted. Identifying the length scales on which nucleation takes place, we demonstrate how the construction of an effective description for these scales naturally resolves the problems of the standard vacuum bounce formalism. Further, by utilising high temperature dimensional reduction, we make a connection to classical nucleation theory. This offers a clear physical picture of thermal bubble nucleation, as well as a computational framework which can then be pushed to higher accuracy. We demonstrate the method for three qualitatively different quantum field theories.Peer reviewe
We present a consistent calculation of bubble-nucleation rates in theories of two scalar fields. Our...
Superheated liquids play an important role in various processes in industry, the laboratory and natu...
A nonperturbative correction to the thermal nucleation rate of critical bubbles in a first order pha...
The standard vacuum bounce formalism suffers from inconsistencies when applied to thermal bubble nuc...
A gauge-invariant framework for computing bubble nucleation rates at finite temperature in the prese...
This paper extends classical results by Langer and Kramers [1-3] and combines them with modern metho...
We present a consistent picture of tunnelling in field theory. Our results apply both to high-temper...
The theory of false vacuum decay in a thermal system may have a cross-over from predominantly therma...
Bubble nucleation has been studied on lattices using phenomenological Langevin equations. Recently t...
We present results from direct, large-scale molecular dynamics simulations of homogeneous bubble (li...
On the basis of Borel resummation, we propose a systematical improvement of bounce calculus of quant...
This paper extends classical results by Langer and Kramers and combines them with modern methods fro...
This paper investigates the importance of radiative corrections for first-order phase transitions, w...
Homogeneous nucleation is the activated process by which the new phase (vapor, liquid or solid) is f...
We estimate bubble-nucleation rates for cosmological phase transitions. We concentrate on the evalua...
We present a consistent calculation of bubble-nucleation rates in theories of two scalar fields. Our...
Superheated liquids play an important role in various processes in industry, the laboratory and natu...
A nonperturbative correction to the thermal nucleation rate of critical bubbles in a first order pha...
The standard vacuum bounce formalism suffers from inconsistencies when applied to thermal bubble nuc...
A gauge-invariant framework for computing bubble nucleation rates at finite temperature in the prese...
This paper extends classical results by Langer and Kramers [1-3] and combines them with modern metho...
We present a consistent picture of tunnelling in field theory. Our results apply both to high-temper...
The theory of false vacuum decay in a thermal system may have a cross-over from predominantly therma...
Bubble nucleation has been studied on lattices using phenomenological Langevin equations. Recently t...
We present results from direct, large-scale molecular dynamics simulations of homogeneous bubble (li...
On the basis of Borel resummation, we propose a systematical improvement of bounce calculus of quant...
This paper extends classical results by Langer and Kramers and combines them with modern methods fro...
This paper investigates the importance of radiative corrections for first-order phase transitions, w...
Homogeneous nucleation is the activated process by which the new phase (vapor, liquid or solid) is f...
We estimate bubble-nucleation rates for cosmological phase transitions. We concentrate on the evalua...
We present a consistent calculation of bubble-nucleation rates in theories of two scalar fields. Our...
Superheated liquids play an important role in various processes in industry, the laboratory and natu...
A nonperturbative correction to the thermal nucleation rate of critical bubbles in a first order pha...