43 research outputs found
Observational hints on the Big Bounce
In this paper we study possible observational consequences of the bouncing
cosmology. We consider a model where a phase of inflation is preceded by a
cosmic bounce. While we consider in this paper only that the bounce is due to
loop quantum gravity, most of the results presented here can be applied for
different bouncing cosmologies. We concentrate on the scenario where the scalar
field, as the result of contraction of the universe, is driven from the bottom
of the potential well. The field is amplified, and finally the phase of the
standard slow-roll inflation is realized. Such an evolution modifies the
standard inflationary spectrum of perturbations by the additional oscillations
and damping on the large scales. We extract the parameters of the model from
the observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation. In particular,
the value of inflaton mass is equal to GeV. In
our considerations we base on the seven years of observations made by the WMAP
satellite. We propose the new observational consistency check for the phase of
slow-roll inflation. We investigate the conditions which have to be fulfilled
to make the observations of the Big Bounce effects possible. We translate them
to the requirements on the parameters of the model and then put the
observational constraints on the model. Based on assumption usually made in
loop quantum cosmology, the Barbero-Immirzi parameter was shown to be
constrained by from the cosmological observations. We have
compared the Big Bounce model with the standard Big Bang scenario and showed
that the present observational data is not informative enough to distinguish
these models.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, JHEP3.cl
Loop Quantum Cosmology corrections to inflationary models
In the recent years the quantization methods of Loop Quantum Gravity have
been successfully applied to the homogeneous and isotropic
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker space-times. The resulting theory, called Loop
Quantum Cosmology (LQC), resolves the Big Bang singularity by replacing it with
the Big Bounce. We argue that LQC generates also certain corrections to field
theoretical inflationary scenarios. These corrections imply that in the LQC the
effective sonic horizon becomes infinite at some point after the bounce and
that the scale of the inflationary potential implied by the COBE normalisation
increases. The evolution of scalar fields immediately after the Bounce becomes
modified in an interesting way. We point out that one can use COBE
normalisation to establish an upper bound on the quantum of length of LQG.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure, plain Late
Loop Quantum Cosmology: A Status Report
The goal of this article is to provide an overview of the current state of
the art in loop quantum cosmology for three sets of audiences: young
researchers interested in entering this area; the quantum gravity community in
general; and, cosmologists who wish to apply loop quantum cosmology to probe
modifications in the standard paradigm of the early universe. An effort has
been made to streamline the material so that, as described at the end of
section I, each of these communities can read only the sections they are most
interested in, without a loss of continuity.Comment: 138 pages, 15 figures. Invited Topical Review, To appear in Classical
and Quantum Gravity. Typos corrected, clarifications and references adde
Inflation from non-minimally coupled scalar field in loop quantum cosmology
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. Out of two frames used in the
literature to describe such systems: Jordan and Einstein frame, the latter one
is applied. Specifically, we explore the idea of the Einstein frame being the
natural 'environment' for quantization and the Jordan picture having an
emergent nature. 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.Comment: Clarity improved. Replaced with revised version accepted in JCA