Is eternal inflation possible in LQC?

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    Multiverse
In summary: The "multiverse" model asserts, 'big bangs' occurs continuously throughout an unlimited number of little patches of 'observable' universes. Many astrophysicists consider this an 'imaginative' idea. Like nearly all such models, it is invulnerable to falsification via observational evidence - which, IMO, places it on similar footing as refrigerator light fairies. In summary, the multiverse model asserts that big bangs occur continuously throughout an unlimited number of little patches of observable universes. Many astrophysicists consider this an 'imaginative' idea, and it is invulnerable to falsification via observational evidence.
  • #1
MathematicalPhysicist
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In the multiverse we have multiple universes, in this model does every universe start with a big bang? does this model explain how these big bangs start to occur?

Any litertaure on this model that discusses these issues?

Thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
When I entered "multiverse" into the arxiv search box it comes up with 126 separate papers. Probably among those 126 papers the subject of big bangs is discussed. But that is only my imagined guess. You'd have to go there yourself to find it.

http://arxiv.org/find/all/1/all:+multiverse/0/1/0/all/0/1
 
  • #3
The basic 'multiverse' model asserts, 'big bangs' occurs continuously throughout an unlimited number of little patches of 'observable' universes. Many astrophysicists consider this an 'imaginative' idea. Like nearly all such models, it is invulnerable to falsification via observational evidence - which, IMO, places it on similar footing as refrigerator light fairies.
 
  • #4
I'm studying inflation, and I've encountered a field named "inflaton", postulated to explain inflation. This model is called "the slow-roll inflation". The Inflaton is a massless field which can assume arbitrarily random values, and when it assume a sufficiently large value, it "explodes" in a Universe. But this can happen more than one times, leading to parallel separated universes.
 
  • #5
No, that's a misrepresentation of eternal inflation. In the inflationary multiverse, slowly expanding regions of space are separated by rapidly expanding space still undergoing inflation. The idea is that the decay rate of the inflaton field is smaller than the speed at which the size of the universe doubles. So, as regions of inflating space settle down to their true vacuum states and stop inflating and begin expanding slowly, these regions are driven apart by the still inflating space. More bubbles continue to form (as regions of the inflation field reach their true vacuum through quantum processes), but the rapidly expanding inflating region will keep them separated because of how enormously fast it's expanding. This creates an ensemble of slow expanding pocket universes separated by space still undergoing inflation. Hence, a multiverse.
 
  • #6
MathematicalPhysicist said:
In the multiverse we have multiple universes, in this model does every universe start with a big bang? does this model explain how these big bangs start to occur?

Any litertaure on this model that discusses these issues?

Thanks in advance.


I would read this:
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0702178

or watch this lecture:


Guth argues that a strong case can be made that the universe underwent inflaiton and that inflation is generically eternal ie that the decay of the inflaton field that led to our universe didnt just happen once but happens eternally as the inflaton field expands fatser than it decays.
Now one can certianly take issue with this, perhpas we don't need inflation at all as people like Turok, Penrose, Steindhart and Magueijo have proposed or perhpas one can construct models of inflaiton that are not generically eternal. Marcus who is one of the most knowledgeable people here on comsology forums will hopefully point you in the right direction for such models.

Nevertheless to accept thje multiverse hypothesis is to accept that inflation occurred and its generically eternal, both of these assumptions may be false but to compare them to believing in faireis seems somewhat unfair to me. But read Guths paper and see what you think.
Eternal inflation is not the only mdoel of the multiverse but i think its the one that attracts the most attention in the literature.
 
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  • #7
One such model:

Spontaneous Inflation and the Origin
of the Arrow of Time
Sean M. Carroll and Jennifer Chen 2004

http://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-th/0410270v1.pdf

This is a paper with a wide ranging discussion of cosmologicallly related concepts and is quite readable. You should note that the paper does not used the world MULTIVERSE as I recall...but the discussion and concepts lead directly there...

Big bangs are themselves currently speculative...no one knows if they are big or not...because our models fail at those apparent 'singularities'. Another way to say the same thing: The known laws of physics are not much help because they describe how things evolve in time not how time can begin.

In simple terms you can take a 'rare' event as the cause of our universe, statistically unlikely but guaranteed to happen eventually by quantum mechanics, or you can take the 'ho hum' view that events leading to new universes happen all the time but are not observable by us. An anthropic approach suggests that our finely tuned universe allowing our kind of life arises among a multiverse most of which are not tuned so as to allow our existence: so in a sense inflation gave the anthropic principle 'new life'.,,allowing our 'special universe'; But, alas, so far 'root causes' of new universes elude us!

Also, you might try searching for 'eternal inflation' as a corollary to 'multiverse'...
 
  • #8
Naty1 said:
One such model:

Spontaneous Inflation and the Origin
of the Arrow of Time
Sean M. Carroll and Jennifer Chen 2004

http://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-th/0410270v1.pdf

This is a paper with a wide ranging discussion of cosmologicallly related concepts and is quite readable. You should note that the paper does not used the world MULTIVERSE as I recall...but the discussion and concepts lead directly there...

Big bangs are themselves currently speculative...no one knows if they are big or not...because our models fail at those apparent 'singularities'. Another way to say the same thing: The known laws of physics are not much help because they describe how things evolve in time not how time can begin.

In simple terms you can take a 'rare' event as the cause of our universe, statistically unlikely but guaranteed to happen eventually by quantum mechanics, or you can take the 'ho hum' view that events leading to new universes happen all the time but are not observable by us. An anthropic approach suggests that our finely tuned universe allowing our kind of life arises among a multiverse most of which are not tuned so as to allow our existence: so in a sense inflation gave the anthropic principle 'new life'.,,allowing our 'special universe'; But, alas, so far 'root causes' of new universes elude us!

Also, you might try searching for 'eternal inflation' as a corollary to 'multiverse'...

I met Sean Caroll last weekend; I wanted to clear up the difference between the Caroll/Chen model and eternal inflation. What the former suggestes is that space can tear into new pieces whcih then undergo inflation , this is different to eternal inflation where the space is still connected , he wrote a superb popular book on the subject :
http://preposterousuniverse.com/eternitytohere/
 
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  • #9
I see MarkM posted while I was composing...his description fits the Carroll -Chen paper I referenced...here are some brief notes I made..quotes or near quotes from the paper:

According to everything we know about gravity, large curvatures are entropically disfavored, tending to ultimately smooth themselves out under ordinary evolution.
our proposal imagines that there do not exist any maximum-entropy equilibrium states, but
rather that the entropy can increase from any starting configuration

The Big Bang in our past is not a unique moment in the history of
the universe; it is simply one of the many times that inflation spontaneously began
with fractal distribution of pocket universes to the far past and far future. [Those which
expand forever are far more likely to lead to the origin of other universes.]

The 'large curvatures" above means 'big bang conditions' and the authors say rather than starting from such entropically disfavored [rare] conditions, universes in their proposal pop out from 'high' entropy [but not very high] flat de Sitter space where thermal quantum fluctuations are sufficient to spawn new universes.
 
  • #10
skydivephil said:
...

Guth argues that a strong case can be made that the universe underwent inflaiton and that inflation is generically eternal ie that the decay of the inflaton field that led to our universe didnt just happen once but happens eternally as the inflaton field expands fatser than it decays.
... or perhpas one can construct models of inflaiton that are not generically eternal. Marcus who ...

Skydive, thanks for the kind words!

Guth's argument fails for the reason you suggest. One can indeed construct such models--they are simpler and more open to observational test.

Guth came along before there was much development of quantum GR. He formed his ideas using classical GR and was forced to make elaborate assumptions. By contrast in quantum GR (for instance in the context of Loop cosmology) inflation arises naturally without the extra baggage of assumptions that, in Guth's scenario, make it generically eternal.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.2475
Probability of Inflation in Loop Quantum Cosmology
Abhay Ashtekar, David Sloan
(Submitted on 12 Mar 2011)
Inflationary models of the early universe provide a natural mechanism for the formation of large scale structure. This success brings to forefront the question of naturalness: Does a sufficiently long slow roll inflation occur generically or does it require a careful fine tuning of initial parameters? In recent years there has been considerable controversy...
...dramatically different predictions can arise because the required measure on the space of solutions is intrinsically ambiguous in general relativity. We then show that this ambiguity can be naturally resolved in loop quantum cosmology (LQC) because the big bang is replaced by a big bounce and the bounce surface can be used to introduce the structure necessary to specify a satisfactory measure.
The second goal of the paper is to present a detailed analysis of the inflationary dynamics of LQC using analytical and numerical methods. By combining this information with the measure on the space of solutions, we address a sharper question than those investigated in the literature: What is the probability of a sufficiently long slow roll inflation WHICH IS COMPATIBLE WITH THE SEVEN YEAR WMAP DATA? We show that the probability is very close to 1. ...
34 pages, 3 figures
 
  • #11
marcus said:
Skydive, thanks for the kind words!

Guth's argument fails for the reason you suggest. One can indeed construct such models--they are simpler and more open to observational test.

Guth came along before there was much development of quantum GR. He formed his ideas using classical GR and was forced to make elaborate assumptions. By contrast in quantum GR (for instance in the context of Loop cosmology) inflation arises naturally without the extra baggage of assumptions that, in Guth's scenario, make it generically eternal.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.2475
Probability of Inflation in Loop Quantum Cosmology
Abhay Ashtekar, David Sloan
(Submitted on 12 Mar 2011)
Inflationary models of the early universe provide a natural mechanism for the formation of large scale structure. This success brings to forefront the question of naturalness: Does a sufficiently long slow roll inflation occur generically or does it require a careful fine tuning of initial parameters? In recent years there has been considerable controversy...
...dramatically different predictions can arise because the required measure on the space of solutions is intrinsically ambiguous in general relativity. We then show that this ambiguity can be naturally resolved in loop quantum cosmology (LQC) because the big bang is replaced by a big bounce and the bounce surface can be used to introduce the structure necessary to specify a satisfactory measure.
The second goal of the paper is to present a detailed analysis of the inflationary dynamics of LQC using analytical and numerical methods. By combining this information with the measure on the space of solutions, we address a sharper question than those investigated in the literature: What is the probability of a sufficiently long slow roll inflation WHICH IS COMPATIBLE WITH THE SEVEN YEAR WMAP DATA? We show that the probability is very close to 1. ...
34 pages, 3 figures

Hi Marcus , two questions that seem relevant to me are
(1)how does inflation start?
(2) how does inflation end ?
As I understand it LQC provides us with a fundamentally new answer to (1) inflation is the result of the big bounce. This gets rid of Turok's fine tuning objection to inflation, right?

However does LQC differ from Guths narrative in the way that inflation ends? Guths paper seems to me to argue that inflation is eternal due to the way it ends ie the inflaton field expands at a faster rate than it decays, so there is always some new space undegoing inflation -I believe this is what one needs to assume to get a mutlvierse. Am I wrong?
So I'm not clear how whether inflation stars as some random fluctuation or whether its through a quanutm bounce, how does this challenge Guth's argument? Can you elabaorate? Does LQC not have an inflaton field? Does it give us a reson to change the assumption of the relative decay rates? or is there some other affect that negates Guth's argument?
 
  • #12
skydive:
I wanted to clear up the difference between the Caroll/Chen model and eternal inflation. What the former suggestes is that space can tear into new pieces whcih then undergo inflation , this is different to eternal inflation where the space is still connected.

Glad you posted that. Are your sure that is correct? From the Carroll-Chen paper I inferred their old and new spaces WERE causally connected. But now that I reread their summary I am not so sure, Maybe you or someone can infer from this:

. This chain of events happens both to the past and the future of the
specified Cauchy surface, leading to a statistically time-symmetric universe as portrayed in
Figure 9. An arrow of time is dynamically generated in both the past and the future, as the
universe continually acts to increase its entropy...A number of other cosmological scenarios have been proposed in which the Big Bang is
not a boundary to spacetime, but simply a phase through which the universe passes. These
include the pre-Big-Bang scenario [94, 95], the ekpyrotic and cyclic universe scenarios [96,
97, 98], the Aguirre-Gratton scenario of eternal inflation [99], and Bojowald’s loop-quantumgravity
cosmology [100, 101]. To the best of our understanding, each of these proposals
invokes special low-entropy conditions on some Cauchy surface, either asymptotically in the
far past or at some moment of minimum size for the universe. In our picture, on the other
hand, there is a slice of spacetime on which the entropy is minimized, but that entropy can
be arbitrarily large. The Big Bang in our past is not a unique moment in the history of
the universe; it is simply one of the many times that inflation spontaneously began from
a background de Sitter phase, similar to the proposal of Garriga and Vilenkin [35].

Otherwise, I'll try and reread the appropriate section of their paper if I can find it!

Can a model be 'time symmetric' AND 'tear' ?
 
  • #13
skydive:
I see the Carroll Chen paper, section 3.2, discusses STARTING INFLATION if
you are interested. I saved this key piece via notes

...Consider, for example, the allowed modes of a field confined to a small
patch of linear size LI . Since this patch is only slightly larger than the Planck length, there
are only a certain number of modes with sub-Planckian energies [perhaps (LI/Lpl)3 ∼ 1018]; we need only to have most of these modes be in their ground states in order for inflation to begin….. Indeed, inflation could plausibly begin in a region of a single Planck volume with an energy density at the Planck scale; all we need is for a fluctuation to give rise to one such region...

Seemed a bit 'hand wavy' to me, but so are many other such descriptions trying to describe a 'start'...
 
  • #14
Hhm not sure where this is in the original paper but in Caroll's book "From eternity to here"its the text that surrounds Fig 85, page 356 in the Uk edition. He distinguishes between baby universes that come from space time splitting off and pocket universes from eternal inflation. Just to check that was the key difference I asked him last weekend and he confirmed that's correct.
 
  • #15
well, thta must then be the case...thanks.

Either way, won't upset me and my Yorkies!
 
  • #16
skydivephil said:
Hi Marcus , two questions that seem relevant to me are
(1)how does inflation start?
(2) how does inflation end ?
As I understand it LQC provides us with a fundamentally new answer to (1) inflation is the result of the big bounce. This gets rid of Turok's fine tuning objection to inflation, right?
An interesting paper on LQC inflation came out today!
http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.4353

As I recall from earlier discussions, LQC gets around several problems associated with inflation because the bounce has a natural brief period of faster than exponential growth. I Hubble rate H increasing to Planck scale (!), they call it "superinflation", rather than steady or declining H (as in slow roll inflation with quadratic potential). The bounce provides a brief kickoff like that generically, without extra assumptions.

Then you can add on a common type of quadratic potential inflaton and it doesn't require fine tuning to ensure it delivers 60 efolds, because the kick of superinflation is guaranteed to get it all energized, high up on its potential hill. You just let it peter out by itself.

No multiverse is involved, basically because the scenario does not rely on any low probability events. You don't need a quantum fluctuation to get started, or a random decay to get stopped. You don't need fine tuning to ensure that the inflaton field will give you an adequate 60 efolds.

I'm remembering back to some Ashtekar et al papers, which you can look up. Essentially the message was that the bounce makes adequate inflation a fairly straightforward proposition if a rather commonly assumed type of inflaton field is put in the picture, and no bother about multiverses.

But rather than go back to those 2011 Ashtekar papers, I would say have a look at the paper by those three young researchers. Tom Pawlowski is a Warsaw postdoc. They have some new ideas. I was just looking at the paper and was excited by it. It is is less speculative and more concrete about inflation. They do some interesting numerical simulations. You might like it.
 
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  • #17
Skydive, this is the paper I mentioned in post#15, when I was replying to your earlier question.http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.4353
Inflation from non-minimally coupled scalar field in loop quantum cosmology
Michal Artymowski, Andrea Dapor, Tomasz Pawlowski
(Submitted on 18 Jul 2012)
The FRW model with non-minimally coupled massive scalar field has been investigated in LQC framework. Considered form of the potential and coupling allows applications to Higgs driven inflation. The resulting dynamics qualitatively modifies the standard bounce paradigm in LQC in two ways:
(i) the bounce point is no longer marked by critical matter energy density,
(ii) the Planck scale physics features the "mexican hat" trajectory with two consecutive bounces and rapid expansion and recollapse between them. Furthermore, for physically viable coupling strength and initial data the subsequent inflation exceeds 60 e-foldings.
14 pages, 5 figures
 
  • #18
If I understand things correctly a multiverse is argued to be generated in slow roll inflation beucase whilst some of the false vacuum/inflaton field decays into a true vacuum state , the remaining section which has not decayed yet, is expanding exponentially, so the total volume of inflating space never declines and hence inflation is eternal. So in order to prevent a multiverse something presumbaly has to happen to get the whole inflaton field to decay everywhere at the same rate and at the same time. Is that the case in LQC or have I misunderstood?
 
  • #19
skydivephil said:
If I understand things correctly a multiverse is argued to be generated in slow roll inflation beucase whilst some of the false vacuum/inflaton field decays into a true vacuum state , the remaining section which has not decayed yet, is expanding exponentially, so the total volume of inflating space never declines and hence inflation is eternal. So in order to prevent a multiverse something presumbaly has to happen to get the whole inflaton field to decay everywhere at the same rate and at the same time. Is that the case in LQC or have I misunderstood?

I think you are imagining eternal inflation scenario rightly. I'm not expert but I'll suggest an alternative picture:

A universe with finite spatial volume collapses and rebounds. There is no "horizon problem" since as it collapses it is all in causal contact.
The entire universe enters superinflation together at a single moment. The scalar field (Higgs or whatever is serving as inflaton) is everywhere primed to the same energy. "Pushed up to the same place on the potential hill" by superinflation.

The entire (still quite small) universe stops superinflation at the same moment when the Hubble rate reaches Planck max, and enters inflation mode. The scalar field rolls down uniformly and the entire universe exits from inflation at the same moment.

I found Tom Pawlowski's article quite interesting at first glance yesterday. I'll take another look now. You might wish to also, as a way of getting a more definite idea of inflation in Loop cosmology.
 
  • #20
I'll quote some sample excerpts from Pawlowski http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.4353
==quote 1207.4353 page 1==
The inflation paradigm is one of the most successful ideas allowing to explain recent precise cosmological observations. However one of its main problems is the construction of the physically viable scenario featuring sufficiently long inflation epoch (> 60 e-foldings) with sufficiently large probability. In this context a lot of hope is attached to the models featuring a non-minimal coupling of gravity and a scalar field (e.g. the Higgs field [1–3]), ... Such mechanism of driving the inflation is also efficient in generating the correct primordial curvature perturbations.
...
At this point it is worth noting that the type of the potential considered, while usually associated with the models of Higgs inflation, is not restricted just to this particular field...
...Thus, recent results from CMS [8] and ATLAS [8] (mH ≃ 125 GeV) are both consistent with SM Higgs inflation.

While the considered model is very successful on the classical level it still suffers the standard problems related with the presence of initial singularity, which are expected to be solved by quantum gravity. One of the leading approaches to provide quantum description of spacetime itself is Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) [9–11]. The cosmological application of its symmetry reduced version, known as Loop Quantum Cosmology (LQC) [12], has indeed provided a qualitatively new picture of early Universe dynamics. The prediction of the so-called big bounce phenomenon [13] offered a new mechanism of resolving long standing cosmological problems. For example, the existence of a pre-bounce epoch of the Universe evolution provides an easy solution to the horizon problem, while preliminary studies indicate that the dynamics in the near-bounce superinflation epoch prevents the catastrophic entropy increase [14, 15] usually considered a danger to bouncing cosmological models (following the consideration of [16]). What’s even more important, the spacetime discreteness effects amount to a dramatic increase of the probability of inflation in the models with standard m2φ2 potential scalar fields [17] (see also [18]). Indeed for such models the probability of inflation with enough e-foldings to ensure consistence with 7 years WMAP data happens with probability greater than 0.999997. These results make the loop approach very attractive in inflationary cosmology.
==endquote==
In looking over 1207.4353, I followed reference [15] and found another interesting Pawlowski one:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1106.3793
"Effective dynamics of the hybrid quantization of the Gowdy T3 universe"
Basically they study a compact highly inhomogeneous bounce. The challenge was to incorporate a lot of inhomogeneity (gravity waves) in the geometry. Parts of the conclusions section on page 18 were thought-provoking. But this doesn't directly relate to the topic of inflation, which our discussion was about.
 
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  • #21
Marcus:

The inflation paradigm is one of the most successful ideas ...one of its main problems is the construction of the physically viable scenario featuring sufficiently long inflation epoch (> 60 e-foldings) with sufficiently large probability...

yes...
Can someone comment on the end of inflation...are there compelling reasons for us to believe that once started, it naturally stops??...

I recall reading somewhere the decay of inflationary energy into radiation after inflation is governed by quantum mechanics...very similar to radioactive decay...but that seems a bit handwavy...like a 'patch' on the 'patch' of inflation itself...
 
  • #22
Naty1 said:
Marcus:
yes...
Can someone comment on the end of inflation...are there compelling reasons for us to believe that once started, it naturally stops??...

I recall reading somewhere the decay of inflationary energy into radiation after inflation is governed by quantum mechanics...very similar to radioactive decay...but that seems a bit handwavy...like a 'patch' on the 'patch' of inflation itself...

In the past the subject of inflation has been pretty speculative and some people were talking about nonmin'ly coupled scalar fields (e.g. Higgs) where the slow roll decay was predetermined according to a couple of slow-roll parameters. Perhaps other people were speculating about other kinds of inflatons where decay was more spontaneous and unpredictable.

With the type of scalar field in Pawlowski et al model, you know it is going to decay on a definite schedule, your problem is TO START IT HIGH ENOUGH UP THE POTENTIAL SO YOU GET ADEQUATE 60 EFOLDS. The problem is do you get ENOUGH. And the whole universe is together in this, not patchy.

So if you read the article you see it depends on strong coupling to gravity and you see that the challenge for them is to prove that you get ENOUGH with high probability.
So Naty this is kind of orthogonal to what you are talking about. They are talking about a specific known field (Higgs) and what is considered reasonable to suppose about it.

To get the flavor of it, you might look on page 2 at section II. NON-MINIMALLY COUPLED SCALAR FIELD

and in particular on page 3 at the subsection "Inflation from strong value of non-minimal coupling" that has equations (2.9) and (2.10) involving the Hubble parameter H, its derivatives H', and the slow-roll parameters of the scalar field.

The situation they are analyzing may be rather different from the infinite-volume bounceless inflation scenarios you have been imagining. The manifold is COMPACT, finite spatial volume. It gets really messed up by gravity waves around the time of the bounce :biggrin: Check it out! Without specialized knowledge we (or I at least) can't explain or understand this type of inflation at level of detail, but we can get a sense of how it differs from what people like Guth and Linde like to imagine.
 
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  • #23
Naty,
Another thing to look at related to your question is this paper
http://arxiv.org/abs/0710.3755 (209 cites)
The Standard Model Higgs boson as the inflaton
Bezrukov and Shaposhnikov
==quote==
In this Letter we argued that inflation can be a natural consequence of the Standard Model, rather than an indication of its weakness. The price to pay is very modest—a non-minimal coupling of the Higgs field to gravity. An interesting consequence of this hypothesis is that the amplitude of scalar perturbations is proportional to the square of the Higgs mass (at fixed ξ), revealing a non-trivial connection between electroweak symmetry breaking and the structure of the universe. The specific prediction of the inflationary parameters (spectral index and tensor-to-scalar ratio) can distinguish it from other models (based, e.g. on inflaton with quadratic potential), provided these parameters are determined with better accuracy.
The inflation mechanism we discussed has in fact a general character and can be used in many exten- sions of the SM. Thus, the νMSM of [36, 37] (SM plus three light fermionic singlets) can explain simultaneously neutrino masses, dark matter, baryon asymmetry of the universe and inflation without introducing any additional particles (the νMSM with the inflaton was considered in [30]). This provides an extra argument in favour of absence of a new energy scale between the electroweak and Planck scales, advocated in [32].
==endquote==

The presentation is nice and clear. You may remember Shaposhnikov as the guy who back in 2009 predicted 126 GeV for the Higgs mass. He seems fairly on top of things.
The paper I referred you to earlier USES the Higgs field inflaton in LQG context and TAKES OVER a fair amount of the treatment of it found in this Shaposhnikov Bezrukov paper.
So it's worth taking a look at. I think its a very promising approach to inflation because it uses something REAL, rather than all "made-up" stuff.

As a reminder, in case anyone else is reading, the paper cited earlier was by ADP
Artymowski, Dapor, Pawlowski and just came out this month.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.4353
Inflation from non-minimally coupled scalar field in loop quantum cosmology
Michal Artymowski, Andrea Dapor, Tomasz Pawlowski
(Submitted on 18 Jul 2012)
The FRW model with non-minimally coupled massive scalar field has been investigated in LQC framework. Considered form of the potential and coupling allows applications to Higgs driven inflation. The resulting dynamics qualitatively modifies the standard bounce paradigm in LQC in two ways: (i) the bounce point is no longer marked by critical matter energy density, (ii) the Planck scale physics features the "mexican hat" trajectory with two consecutive bounces and rapid expansion and recollapse between them. Furthermore, for physically viable coupling strength and initial data the subsequent inflation exceeds 60 e-foldings.
14 pages, 5 figures
 
  • #24
marcus said:
Naty,
Another thing to look at related to your question is this paper
http://arxiv.org/abs/0710.3755 (209 cites)
The Standard Model Higgs boson as the inflaton
Bezrukov and Shaposhnikov
==quote==
In this Letter we argued that inflation can be a natural consequence of the Standard Model, rather than an indication of its weakness. The price to pay is very modest—a non-minimal coupling of the Higgs field to gravity. An interesting consequence of this hypothesis is that the amplitude of scalar perturbations is proportional to the square of the Higgs mass (at fixed ξ), revealing a non-trivial connection between electroweak symmetry breaking and the structure of the universe. The specific prediction of the inflationary parameters (spectral index and tensor-to-scalar ratio) can distinguish it from other models (based, e.g. on inflaton with quadratic potential), provided these parameters are determined with better accuracy.
The inflation mechanism we discussed has in fact a general character and can be used in many exten- sions of the SM. Thus, the νMSM of [36, 37] (SM plus three light fermionic singlets) can explain simultaneously neutrino masses, dark matter, baryon asymmetry of the universe and inflation without introducing any additional particles (the νMSM with the inflaton was considered in [30]). This provides an extra argument in favour of absence of a new energy scale between the electroweak and Planck scales, advocated in [32].
==endquote==

The presentation is nice and clear. You may remember Shaposhnikov as the guy who back in 2009 predicted 126 GeV for the Higgs mass. He seems fairly on top of things.
The paper I referred you to earlier USES the Higgs field inflaton in LQG context and TAKES OVER a fair amount of the treatment of it found in this Shaposhnikov Bezrukov paper.
So it's worth taking a look at. I think its a very promising approach to inflation because it uses something REAL, rather than all "made-up" stuff.

As a reminder, in case anyone else is reading, the paper cited earlier was by ADP
Artymowski, Dapor, Pawlowski and just came out this month.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.4353
Inflation from non-minimally coupled scalar field in loop quantum cosmology
Michal Artymowski, Andrea Dapor, Tomasz Pawlowski
(Submitted on 18 Jul 2012)
The FRW model with non-minimally coupled massive scalar field has been investigated in LQC framework. Considered form of the potential and coupling allows applications to Higgs driven inflation. The resulting dynamics qualitatively modifies the standard bounce paradigm in LQC in two ways: (i) the bounce point is no longer marked by critical matter energy density, (ii) the Planck scale physics features the "mexican hat" trajectory with two consecutive bounces and rapid expansion and recollapse between them. Furthermore, for physically viable coupling strength and initial data the subsequent inflation exceeds 60 e-foldings.
14 pages, 5 figures

Hi Marcus , this seems to be a very interesting result.
So is the uniformity of the decay rate of the inflaton field in LQC an agreed upon result or is it something that is still being thrashed out? The reason i ask is that I spoke to Martin Bojowald about this topic last year and he said that LQC was not incompatible with eternal inflation. But as far as I can see if the inflaton field decays everywhere at the seems rate at once then eternal inflation seems ruled out assuming LQC is true. If this is right and a clear bounce signal can be found say in the B mode this could also mean eternal inflation is falsifiable, correct?
 
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1. What is the multiverse theory?

The multiverse theory is the idea that our universe is just one of many universes that exist simultaneously. These universes may have different physical laws, dimensions, and even different versions of ourselves.

2. How does the multiverse theory relate to the Big Bang?

The multiverse theory suggests that the Big Bang was not a one-time event, but rather a continuous process that is happening across multiple universes. It is possible that our universe was created from a larger parent universe through the process of inflation.

3. Is there any evidence for the multiverse theory?

While there is currently no direct evidence for the existence of other universes, there are several pieces of indirect evidence that support the multiverse theory. For example, cosmic inflation, the rapid expansion of the universe after the Big Bang, is best explained by the multiverse theory.

4. How do scientists study the multiverse?

Since we cannot directly observe other universes, scientists use mathematical models and theories to study the possibility of a multiverse. They also look for subtle patterns in the cosmic microwave background radiation, which could be evidence of collisions between our universe and other universes.

5. What are the implications of a multiverse?

The multiverse theory has significant implications for our understanding of the universe and our place in it. It raises questions about the origin of our universe and the existence of other forms of life in other universes. It also has philosophical implications, such as the idea that there may be an infinite number of versions of ourselves in different universes.

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