48 research outputs found
A-Time Beats No Time. A Response to Brian Leftow
In this paper, I present a new argument against the compatibility of human free will and divine timelessness when conceiving of eternity in terms of an additional dimension as presented by brian leftow. The paper is organized as follows: After giving a brief sketch of leftow’s model, I argue that assuming libertarianism, free will presupposes presentism, since metaphysical indeterminism is only compatible with a presentist A-theory of physical time. Given this result, I make a case for the incompatibility of presentism and divine eternity modelled as a frame of reference, implying the incompatibility of the latter with human free will
A new kind of cyclic universe
Combining intervals of ekpyrotic (ultra-slow) contraction with a
(non-singular) classical bounce naturally leads to a novel cyclic theory of the
universe in which the Hubble parameter, energy density and temperature
oscillate periodically, but the scale factor grows by an exponential factor
from one cycle to the next. The resulting cosmology not only resolves the
homogeneity, isotropy, flatness and monopole problems and generates a nearly
scale invariant spectrum of density perturbations, but it also addresses a
number of age-old cosmological issues that big bang inflationary cosmology does
not. There may also be wider-ranging implications for fundamental physics,
black holes and quantum measurement.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
The anamorphic universe
We introduce "anamorphic" cosmology, an approach for explaining the
smoothness and flatness of the universe on large scales and the generation of a
nearly scale-invariant spectrum of adiabatic density perturbations. The
defining feature is a smoothing phase that acts like a contracting universe
based on some Weyl frame-invariant criteria and an expanding universe based on
other frame-invariant criteria. An advantage of the contracting aspects is that
it is possible to avoid the multiverse and measure problems that arise in
inflationary models. Unlike ekpyrotic models, anamorphic models can be
constructed using only a single field and can generate a nearly scale-invariant
spectrum of tensor perturbations. Anamorphic models also differ from pre-big
bang and matter bounce models that do not explain the smoothness. We present
some examples of cosmological models that incorporate an anamorphic smoothing
phase.Comment: 35 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Gauge/frame invariant variables for the numerical relativity study of cosmological spacetimes
To numerically evolve the full Einstein equations (or modifications thereof),
simulations of cosmological spacetimes must rely on a particular formulation of
the field equations combined with a specific gauge/frame choice. Yet truly
physical results cannot depend on the given formulation or gauge/frame choice.
In this paper, we present a resolution of the gauge problem and, as an example,
numerically implement it to evaluate our previous work on contracting
spacetimes.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
Inflationary schism after Planck2013
Classic inflation, the theory described in textbooks, is based on the idea
that, beginning from typical initial conditions and assuming a simple inflaton
potential with a minimum of fine-tuning, inflation can create exponentially
large volumes of space that are generically homogeneous, isotropic and flat,
with nearly scale-invariant spectra of density and gravitational wave
fluctuations that are adiabatic, Gaussian and have generic predictable
properties. In a recent paper, we showed that, in addition to having certain
conceptual problems known for decades, classic inflation is for the first time
also disfavored by data, specifically the most recent data from WMAP, ACT and
Planck2013. Guth, Kaiser and Nomura and Linde have each recently published
critiques of our paper, but, as made clear here, we all agree about one thing:
the problematic state of classic inflation. Instead, they describe an
alternative inflationary paradigm that revises the assumptions and goals of
inflation, and perhaps of science generally.Comment: 7 pages, 2 table
Stability and the Gauge Problem in Non-Perturbative Cosmology
In this paper, we describe the first steps towards fully non-perturbative
cosmology. We explain why the conventional methods used by cosmologists based
on the ADM formulation are generally inadequate for this purpose and why it is
advantageous instead to adapt the harmonic formulation pioneered and utilized
in mathematical and numerical relativity. Here we focus on using this approach
to evaluating the linear mode stability in homogeneous and nearly homogeneous
backgrounds and devising a valid scheme and diagnostics for numerical
computation. We also briefly touch on the relevance of these methods for
extracting cosmological observables from non-perturbative simulations.Comment: 43 page
NEC violation in mimetic cosmology revisited
In the context of Einstein gravity, if the null energy condition (NEC) is
satisfied, the energy density in expanding space-times always decreases while
in contracting space-times the energy density grows and the universe eventually
collapses into a singularity. In particular, no non-singular bounce is
possible. It is, though, an open question if this energy condition can be
violated in a controlled way, i.e., without introducing pathologies, such as
unstable negative-energy states or an imaginary speed of sound. In this paper,
we will re-examine the claim that the recently proposed mimetic scenario can
violate the NEC without pathologies. We show that mimetic cosmology is prone to
gradient instabilities even in cases when the NEC is satisfied (except for
trivial examples). Most interestingly, the source of the instability is always
the Einstein-Hilbert term in the action. The matter stress-energy component
does not contribute spatial gradient terms but instead makes the problematic
curvature modes dynamical. We also show that mimetic cosmology can be
understood as a singular limit of known, well-behaved theories involving
higher-derivative kinetic terms and discuss ways of removing the instability.Comment: 7 page
Sourcing curvature modes with entropy perturbations in non-singular bouncing cosmologies
The observed temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background can
be traced back to primordial curvature modes that are sourced by adiabatic
and/or entropic matter perturbations. In this paper, we explore the entropic
mechanism in the context of non-singular bouncing cosmologies. We show that
curvature modes are naturally generated during `graceful exit,' i.e., when the
smoothing slow contraction phase ends and the universe enters the bounce stage.
Here, the key role is played by the kinetic energy components that come to
dominate the energy density and drive the evolution towards the cosmological
bounce.Comment: 17 page