Oldfart said:
Marcus, thanks for your replies!
Two quick questions: (1) Are Ashtekar/Sloan (and you) politely saying that Steinhardt's position on inflation is highly questionable, and (2) Is the introduction of bounce in the loop model a respectable thing to do now-a-days, or more of an unsubstantiated way of ducking the singularity issues?
I'm something of a Steinhardt fan, partly because of his hardheaded opposition to Multiverse fantasies. But mainly just out of respect for his rigorous intelligence in general. (I don't like his "clashing branes" cosmology, but that doesn't prevent me from valuing the man.)
The game in cosmology (and maybe science in general) is not to get people to believe stuff, but to produce testable theories and test them.
It may be that Loop Cosmology is right and there was a bounce, or it could be wrong and there wasn't.
Loop might make inflation more viable and both could be wrong. Or both could be right.
There are a number of phenomenologists who have written papers recently discussing how to test for a bounce by close examination of the CMB. The Planck spacecraft will help but another similar mission to study polarization of the CMB would be needed. The bounce, and LQC, might be falsified, or might pass the test.
If LQC passes some observational tests, that would make inflation more tenable than it is now.
(Essentially because the bounce has a natural brief "superinflation" phase that can provide a proper start for inflation.)
I haven't read the SciAm article. I don't know all the arguments Steinhardt raises. I know the G&T paper and I know some papers of Steinhardt, but can't speak about the SciAm article.
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About respectability, people who don't know what's going on habitually heap scorn on LQC, just because string theorists made it fashionable to scorn anything Loop.
But Loop is getting the attention of phenomenologists (professional theory-testers) and is experiencing a period of rapid growth in papers, citations, number of researchers, jobs, and faculty positions.
It's a small field with only 200 or so active researchers world-wide, so very few people encounter evidence of this growth in their own departments. An increasing number of universities are taking on Loop PhDs, but the number is still small, so a typical guy in a physics department will not be aware of this.
The key reason for growth (I think) is that in Loop there is roughly speaking one main theory, and it is testable.
(There are variants as always but for the Loop Cosmology application it's basically whatever Ashtekar says, for the full Loop Gravity theory it is basically what Rovelli says, and they exchange postdocs and collaborators.)
I can give you links to 14 recent papers about testing Loop bounce by CMB observations, if you want. A simple "Spires" search for stuff after 2008.
Another way to see the field is just to do a Spires search for "quantum cosmology" ranked by citation count. In quantum cosmology it is the Loop papers that are getting cited, so they predominate in the first 50 or so on the list.
So about respectability, it depends on how aware you are of the real world. I'd say very respectable if you know what's going on. Not respectable if you're the kind of person who just repeats what they hear in the average physics department coffeeroom.
I live in Berkeley. This year UC Berkeley will produce its first Loop PhD. One of the most promising PhD students in the physics department just happened somehow to get the notion, and find an advisor who just happened to be willing. That kind of thing doesn't happen all that much! They both went to Marseille for several weeks and spent time with Rovelli's group--in 2008 and 2009---and it worked out.
You still have to be fairly original and have some gumption to do that, unless you happen to be in one of the handful of universities that already have programs. Or perhaps worldwide it is a dozen. Have to go.