30 research outputs found
Quantum Gravity and the Large Scale Anomaly
The spectrum of primordial perturbations obtained by calculating the quantum
gravitational corrections to the dynamics of scalar perturbations is compared
with Planck 2013 and BICEP2/{\it Keck Array} public data. The quantum
gravitational effects are calculated in the context of a Wheeler-De Witt
approach and have quite distinctive features. We constrain the free parameters
of the theory by comparison with observations.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures; the analysis has been updated with the combined
Planck-BICEP2/Keck Array public data. Final version, accepted for publication
in JCA
Signatures of Quantum Gravity in a Born-Oppenheimer Context
We solve a general equation describing the lowest order corrections arising
from quantum gravitational effects to the spectrum of cosmological
fluctuations. The spectra of scalar and tensor perturbations are calculated to
first order in the slow roll approximation and the results are compared with
the most recent observations. The slow roll approximation gives qualitatively
new quantum gravitational effects with respect to the pure de Sitter case.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures; final version accepted for publication in PL
Inflation and Quantum Gravity in a Born-Oppenheimer Context
A general equation, describing the lowest order corrections coming from
quantum gravitational effects to the spectrum of cosmological scalar
fluctuations is obtained. These corrections are explicitly estimated for the
case of a de Sitter evolution.Comment: 13 pages, no figures. Final version, accepted for publication in PL
Reconstruction of Scalar Potentials in Induced Gravity and Cosmology
We develop a technique for the reconstruction of the potential for a scalar
field in cosmological models based on induced gravity. The potentials
reproducing cosmological evolutions driven by barotropic perfect fluids, a
cosmological constant, a Chaplygin gas and a modified Chaplygin gas are
constructed explicitly.Comment: 14 pages, no figures. Final version published in PL
Dynamical Dark Energy and Spontaneously Generated Gravity
We study the cosmological evolution of an induced gravity model with a scale
symmetry breaking potential for the scalar field. The radiation to matter
transition, following inflation and reheating, influences the dynamics of such
a field through its non minimal coupling. We illustrate how, under certain
conditions on the potential, such a dynamics can lead to a suitable amount of
dark energy explaining the present accelerated expansion.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Vacuum energy and spectral function sum rules
We reformulate the problem of the cancellation of the ultraviolet
divergencies of the vacuum energy, particularly important at the cosmological
level, in terms of a saturation of spectral function sum rules which leads to a
set of conditions on the spectrum of the fundamental theory. We specialize the
approach to both Minkowski and de Sitter space-times and investigate some
examples.Comment: 11 pages, revtex4, no figures, version to be published on PR
Phantom universe from CPT symmetric QFT
Inspired by the generalization of quantum theory for the case of
non-Hermitian Hamiltonians with CPT symmetry, we construct a simple classical
cosmological scalar field based model describing a smooth transition from
ordinary dark energy to the phantom one
Quantum cosmology with big-brake singularity
We investigate a cosmological model with a big-brake singularity in the
future: while the first time derivative of the scale factor goes to zero, its
second time derivative tends to minus infinity. Although we also discuss the
classical version of the model in some detail, our main interest lies in its
quantization. We formulate the Wheeler-DeWitt equation and derive solutions
describing wave packets. We show that all such solutions vanish in the region
of the classical singularity, a behaviour which we interpret as singularity
avoidance. We then discuss the same situation in loop quantum cosmology. While
this leads to a different factor ordering, the singularity is there avoided,
too.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, figures improved, references added, conceptual
clarifications include
Classical and quantum Big Brake cosmology for scalar field and tachyonic models
We study a relation between the cosmological singularities in classical and
quantum theory, comparing the classical and quantum dynamics in some models
possessing the Big Brake singularity - the model based on a scalar field and
two models based on a tachyon-pseudo-tachyon field . It is shown that the
effect of quantum avoidance is absent for the soft singularities of the Big
Brake type while it is present for the Big Bang and Big Crunch singularities.
Thus, there is some kind of a classical - quantum correspondence, because soft
singularities are traversable in classical cosmology, while the strong Big Bang
and Big Crunch singularities are not traversable.Comment: final version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Networks of cosmological histories, crossing of the phantom divide line and potentials with cusps
We discuss the phenomenon of the smooth dynamical gravity induced crossing of
the phantom divide line in a framework of simple cosmological models where it
appears to occur rather naturally, provided the potential of the unique scalar
field has some kind of cusp. The behavior of cosmological trajectories in the
vicinity of the cusp is studied in some detail and a simple mechanical analogy
is presented. The phenomenon of certain complementarity between the smoothness
of the spacetime geometry and matter equations of motion is elucidated. We
introduce a network of cosmological histories and qualitatively describe some
of its properties