253 research outputs found
Bubble, Bubble, Flow and Hubble: Large Scale Galaxy Flow from Cosmological Bubble Collisions
We study large scale structure in the cosmology of Coleman-de Luccia bubble
collisions. Within a set of controlled approximations we calculate the effects
on galaxy motion seen from inside a bubble which has undergone such a
collision. We find that generically bubble collisions lead to a coherent bulk
flow of galaxies on some part of our sky, the details of which depend on the
initial conditions of the collision and redshift to the galaxy in question.
With other parameters held fixed the effects weaken as the amount of inflation
inside our bubble grows, but can produce measurable flows past the number of
efolds required to solve the flatness and horizon problems.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures, pdftex, minor corrections and references adde
Anthropic Explanation of the Dark Matter Abundance
I use Bousso's causal diamond measure to make a statistical prediction for
the dark matter abundance, assuming an axion with a large decay constant f_a >>
10^{12} GeV. Using a crude approximation for observer formation, the prediction
agrees well with observation: 30% of observers form in regions with less dark
matter than we observe, while 70% of observers form in regions with more dark
matter. Large values of the dark matter ratio are disfavored by an elementary
effect: increasing the amount of dark matter while holding fixed the baryon to
photon ratio decreases the number of baryons inside one horizon volume. Thus
the prediction is rather insensitive to assumptions about observer formation in
universes with much more dark matter than our own. The key assumption is that
the number of observers per baryon is roughly independent of the dark matter
ratio for ratios near the observed value.Comment: 10 pages; v3: published version, references adde
Polarizing Bubble Collisions
We predict the polarization of cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons that
results from a cosmic bubble collision. The polarization is purely E-mode,
symmetric around the axis pointing towards the collision bubble, and has
several salient features in its radial dependence that can help distinguish it
from a more conventional explanation for unusually cold or hot features in the
CMB sky. The anomalous "cold spot" detected by the Wilkinson Microwave
Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) satellite is a candidate for a feature produced by such
a collision, and the Planck satellite and other proposed surveys will measure
the polarization on it in the near future. The detection of such a collision
would provide compelling evidence for the string theory landscape.Comment: Published version. 15 pages, 8 figure
Spatial Curvature Falsifies Eternal Inflation
Inflation creates large-scale cosmological density perturbations that are
characterized by an isotropic, homogeneous, and Gaussian random distribution
about a locally flat background. Even in a flat universe, the spatial curvature
measured within one Hubble volume receives contributions from long wavelength
perturbations, and will not in general be zero. These same perturbations
determine the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature fluctuations, which
are O(10^-5). Consequently, the low-l multipole moments in the CMB temperature
map predict the value of the measured spatial curvature \Omega_k. On this basis
we argue that a measurement of |\Omega_k| > 10^-4 would rule out slow-roll
eternal inflation in our past with high confidence, while a measurement of
\Omega_k < -10^-4 (which is positive curvature, a locally closed universe)
rules out false-vacuum eternal inflation as well, at the same confidence level.
In other words, negative curvature (a locally open universe) is consistent with
false-vacuum eternal inflation but not with slow-roll eternal inflation, and
positive curvature falsifies both. Near-future experiments will dramatically
extend the sensitivity of \Omega_k measurements and constitute a sharp test of
these predictions.Comment: 16+2 pages, 2 figure
A Conformal Field Theory for Eternal Inflation
We study a statistical model defined by a conformally invariant distribution
of overlapping spheres in arbitrary dimension d. The model arises as the
asymptotic distribution of cosmic bubbles in d+1 dimensional de Sitter space,
and also as the asymptotic distribution of bubble collisions with the domain
wall of a fiducial "observation bubble" in d+2 dimensional de Sitter space. In
this note we calculate the 2-,3-, and 4-point correlation functions of
exponentials of the "bubble number operator" analytically in d=2. We find that
these correlators, when carefully defined, are free of infrared divergences,
covariant under the global conformal group, charge conserving, and transform
with positive conformal dimensions that are related in a novel way to the
charge. Although by themselves these operators probably do not define a
full-fledged conformal field theory, one can use the partition function on a
sphere to compute an approximate central charge in the 2D case. The theory in
any dimension has a noninteracting limit when the nucleation rate of the
bubbles in the bulk is very large. The theory in two dimensions is related to
some models of continuum percolation, but it is conformal for all values of the
tunneling rate.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figure
Eternal inflation predicts that time will end
Present treatments of eternal inflation regulate infinities by imposing a
geometric cutoff. We point out that some matter systems reach the cutoff in
finite time. This implies a nonzero probability for a novel type of
catastrophe. According to the most successful measure proposals, our galaxy is
likely to encounter the cutoff within the next 5 billion years.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figur
Bubble collisions and measures of the multiverse
To compute the spectrum of bubble collisions seen by an observer in an
eternally-inflating multiverse, one must choose a measure over the diverging
spacetime volume, including choosing an "initial" hypersurface below which
there are no bubble nucleations. Previous calculations focused on the case
where the initial hypersurface is pushed arbitrarily deep into the past.
Interestingly, the observed spectrum depends on the orientation of the initial
hypersurface, however one's ability observe the effect rapidly decreases with
the ratio of inflationary Hubble rates inside and outside one's bubble. We
investigate whether this conclusion might be avoided under more general
circumstances, in particular placing the observer's bubble near the initial
hypersurface. We find that it is not. As a point of reference, a substantial
appendix reviews relevant aspects of the measure problem of eternal inflation.Comment: 24 pages, two figures, plus 16-page appendix with one figure; v2:
minor improvements and clarifications, conclusions unchanged (version to
appear in JCAP
Scalar Three-point Functions in a CDL Background
Motivated by the FRW-CFT proposal by Freivogel, Sekino, Susskind and Yeh, we
compute the three-point function of a scalar field in a Coleman-De Luccia
instanton background. We first compute the three-point function of the scalar
field making only very mild assumptions about the scalar potential and the
instanton background. We obtain the three-point function for points in the FRW
patch of the CDL instanton and take two interesting limits; the limit where the
three points are near the boundary of the hyperbolic slices of the FRW patch,
and the limit where the three points lie on the past lightcone of the FRW
patch. We expand the past lightcone three-point function in spherical
harmonics. We show that the near boundary limit expansion of the three-point
function of a massless scalar field exhibits conformal structure compatible
with FRW-CFT when the FRW patch is flat. We also compute the three-point
function when the scalar is massive, and explain the obstacles to generalizing
the conjectured field-operator correspondence of massless fields to massive
fields.Comment: 42 pages + appendices, 10 figures; v2, v3: minor correction
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