scholarly journals Cosmological inflation driven by a scalar torsion function

2021 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Guimarães ◽  
R. de C. Lima ◽  
S. H. Pereira

AbstractA viable model for inflation driven by a torsion function in a Friedmann background is presented. The scalar spectral index in the interval $$0.92\lesssim n_{s}\lesssim 0.97$$ 0.92 ≲ n s ≲ 0.97 is obtained in order to satisfy the initial conditions for inflation. The post inflationary phase is also studied, and the analytical solutions obtained for scale factor and energy density generalizes that ones for a matter dominated universe, indicating just a small deviation from the standard model evolution. The same kind of torsion function used also describes satisfactorily the recent acceleration of the universe, which could indicate a possible unification of different phases, apart form specific constants

Universe ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 276
Author(s):  
Muhammad Zahid Mughal ◽  
Iftikhar Ahmad ◽  
Juan Luis García Guirao

In this review article, the study of the development of relativistic cosmology and the introduction of inflation in it as an exponentially expanding early phase of the universe is carried out. We study the properties of the standard cosmological model developed in the framework of relativistic cosmology and the geometric structure of spacetime connected coherently with it. The geometric properties of space and spacetime ingrained into the standard model of cosmology are investigated in addition. The big bang model of the beginning of the universe is based on the standard model which succumbed to failure in explaining the flatness and the large-scale homogeneity of the universe as demonstrated by observational evidence. These cosmological problems were resolved by introducing a brief acceleratedly expanding phase in the very early universe known as inflation. The cosmic inflation by setting the initial conditions of the standard big bang model resolves these problems of the theory. We discuss how the inflationary paradigm solves these problems by proposing the fast expansion period in the early universe. Further inflation and dark energy in fR modified gravity are also reviewed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (02) ◽  
pp. 1830003 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Ellis

The most important discovery in particle physics in recent years was that of the Higgs boson, and much effort is continuing to measure its properties, which agree obstinately with the Standard Model, so far. However, there are many reasons to expect physics beyond the Standard Model, motivated by the stability of the electroweak vacuum, the existence of dark matter and the origin of the visible matter in the Universe, neutrino physics, the hierarchy of mass scales in physics, cosmological inflation and the need for a quantum theory for gravity. Most of these issues are being addressed by the experiments during Run 2 of the LHC, and supersymmetry could help resolve many of them. In addition to the prospects for the LHC, I also review briefly those for direct searches for dark matter and possible future colliders.


2016 ◽  
Vol 31 (02n03) ◽  
pp. 1641010 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Maia

The Cauchy-Kowalevski theorem is applied to the solutions of Einstein’s equations and to cosmology. Three fundamental requirements of the theorem: the use of analytic series; the existence of the boundary surfaces; and the setting of the independent initial data are revised, using methods of geometric analysis. It is found that during its relativistic phase the standard model of the universe is completely governed by Einstein’s gravitation, in which the source includes a massive spin-2 field, compatible with the observations of the dark sector of the universe. On the other hand, the exponential growth of the volume of the universe at the inflationary phase, is shown to be predominantly thermodynamical, as opposed to a relativistic process. These two phases are joined by the last inflationary surface endowed with a mirror symmetry, which eventually suggests a possible bouncing universe scenario.


2005 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 2335-2339 ◽  
Author(s):  
SEAN M. CARROLL ◽  
JENNIFER CHEN

If our universe underwent inflation, its entropy during the inflationary phase would have been substantially lower than it is today. Because a low-entropy state is less likely to be chosen randomly than a high-entropy one, inflation is unlikely to arise through randomly-chosen initial conditions. To resolve this puzzle, we examine the notion of a natural state for the universe, and argue that it is a nearly-empty space–time. If empty space has a small vacuum energy, however, inflation can begin spontaneously in this background. This scenario explains why a universe like ours is likely to have begun via a period of inflation, and also provides an origin for the cosmological arrow of time.


Author(s):  
Muhammad Zahid Mughal ◽  
Iftikhar Ahmad ◽  
Juan Luis GARCÍA GUIRAO

In this review article the study of the development of relativistic cosmology and introduction of inflation in it is carried out. We study the properties of standard cosmological model developed in the framework of relativistic cosmology and the geometric structure of spacetime connected coherently with it. We examine the geometric properties of space and spacetime ingrained into the standard model of cosmology. The big bang model of the beginning of the universe is based on the standard model which succumbed to failure in explaining the flatness and the large-scale homogeneity of the universe as demonstrated by observational evidence. These cosmological problems were resolved by introducing a brief acceleratedly expanding phase in the very early universe known as inflation. Cosmic inflation by setting the initial conditions of the standard big bang model resolves these problems of the theory. We discuss how the inflationary paradigm solves these problems by proposing the fast expansion period in the early universe.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (12) ◽  
pp. 1342001 ◽  
Author(s):  
HAMSA PADMANABHAN ◽  
T. PADMANABHAN

The current acceleration of the universe can be modeled in terms of a cosmological constant Λ. We show that the extremely small value of [Formula: see text], the holy grail of theoretical physics, can be understood in terms of a new, dimensionless, conserved number Cosmic Mode Index (CosMIn), which counts the number of modes crossing the Hubble radius during the three phases of evolution of the universe. Theoretical considerations suggest that N ≈ 4π. This single postulate leads us to the correct, observed numerical value of the cosmological constant! This approach also provides a unified picture of cosmic evolution relating the early inflationary phase to the late accelerating phase.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (20) ◽  
pp. 1550098
Author(s):  
Esmaeil Ebrahimi

In this work, we consider higher-dimensional structures in [Formula: see text]-gravity in an expanding background. We assume a Ricci scalar constant background and use this assumption as the basic constraint to find solutions. Two classes of solutions are presented in which every one includes naked singularity and wormhole geometries. Both classes of solutions show inflationary phase of expansion favored by recent acceleration of the universe. Traversability of the wormhole solutions is discussed. The possibility of satisfying or violating the weak energy condition (WEC) for wormholes is explored. For one class of solutions, particular choices of constants result in wormholes which satisfy the WEC all over the spacetime.


2009 ◽  
Vol 24 (20n21) ◽  
pp. 3669-3864 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. BOYANOVSKY ◽  
C. DESTRI ◽  
H. J. DE VEGA ◽  
N. G. SANCHEZ

Inflation is today a part of the Standard Model of the Universe supported by the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and large scale structure (LSS) datasets. Inflation solves the horizon and flatness problems and naturally generates density fluctuations that seed LSS and CMB anisotropies, and tensor perturbations (primordial gravitational waves). Inflation theory is based on a scalar field φ (the inflaton) whose potential is fairly flat, leading to a slow-roll evolution. This review focuses on the following new aspects of inflation. We present the effective theory of inflation à la Ginsburg and Landau, in which the inflaton potential is a polynomial in the field φ and has the universal form [Formula: see text], where [Formula: see text], M ≪ M Pl is the scale of inflation and N ~ 60 is the number of e-folds since the cosmologically relevant modes exit the horizon till inflation ends. The slow-roll expansion becomes a systematic 1/N expansion and the inflaton couplings become naturally small as powers of the ratio (M/M Pl )2. The spectral index and the ratio of tensor/scalar fluctuations are [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], while the running index turns out to be [Formula: see text] and therefore can be neglected. The energy scale of inflation M ~ 0.7 × 1016 GeV is completely determined by the amplitude of the scalar adiabatic fluctuations. A complete analytic study plus the Monte Carlo Markov chain (MCMC) analysis of the available CMB+LSS data (including WMAP5) with fourth degree trinomial potentials showed: (a) the spontaneous breaking of the φ → - φ symmetry of the inflaton potential; (b) a lower bound for r in new inflation: r > 0.023 (95% CL) and r > 0.046 (68 CL); (c) the preferred inflation potential is a double-well, even function of the field with a moderate quartic coupling yielding as the most probable values ns ≃ 0.964, r ≃ 0.051. This value for r is within reach of forthcoming CMB observations. The present data in the effective theory of inflation clearly prefer new inflation. Study of higher degree inflaton potentials shows that terms of degree higher than 4 do not affect the fit in a significant way. In addition, a horizon exit happens for [Formula: see text], making higher order terms in the potential w negligible. We summarize the physical effects of generic initial conditions (different from Bunch–Davies) on the scalar and tensor perturbations during slow roll and introduce the transfer function D(k), which encodes the observable initial condition effects on the power spectra. These effects are more prominent in the low CMB multipoles: a change in the initial conditions during slow roll can account for the observed CMB quadrupole suppression. Slow-roll inflation is generically preceded by a short, fast-roll stage. Bunch–Davies initial conditions are the natural initial conditions for the fast-roll perturbations. During fast roll, the potential in the wave equations of curvature and tensor perturbations is purely attractive and leads to a suppression of the curvature and tensor CMB quadrupoles. An MCMC analysis of the WMAP+SDSS data including fast roll shows that the quadrupole mode exits the horizon about 0.2 e-fold before fast roll ends and its amplitude gets suppressed. In addition, fast roll fixes the initial inflation redshift to be z init = 0.9 × 1056 and the total number of e-folds of inflation to be N tot ≃ 64. Fast roll fits the TT, the TE and the EE modes well, reproducing the quadrupole suppression. A thorough study of the quantum loop corrections reveals that they are very small and are controlled by powers of (H/M Pl )2 ~ 10-9, a conclusion that validates the reliability of the effective theory of inflation. The present review shows how powerful the Ginsburg–Landau effective theory of inflation is in predicting observables that are being or will soon be contrasted with observations.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adib Rifqi Setiawan

Put simply, Lisa Randall’s job is to figure out how the universe works, and what it’s made of. Her contributions to theoretical particle physics include two models of space-time that bear her name. The first Randall–Sundrum model addressed a problem with the Standard Model of the universe, and the second concerned the possibility of a warped additional dimension of space. In this work, we caught up with Randall to talk about why she chose a career in physics, where she finds inspiration, and what advice she’d offer budding physicists. This article has been edited for clarity. My favourite quote in this interview is, “Figure out what you enjoy, what your talents are, and what you’re most curious to learn about.” If you insterest in her work, you can contact her on Twitter @lirarandall.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adib Rifqi Setiawan

Put simply, Lisa Randall’s job is to figure out how the universe works, and what it’s made of. Her contributions to theoretical particle physics include two models of space-time that bear her name. The first Randall–Sundrum model addressed a problem with the Standard Model of the universe, and the second concerned the possibility of a warped additional dimension of space. In this work, we caught up with Randall to talk about why she chose a career in physics, where she finds inspiration, and what advice she’d offer budding physicists. This article has been edited for clarity. My favourite quote in this interview is, “Figure out what you enjoy, what your talents are, and what you’re most curious to learn about.” If you insterest in her work, you can contact her on Twitter @lirarandall.


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