232 research outputs found

    Gravity Waves Signatures from Anisotropic pre-Inflation

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    We show that expanding or contracting Kasner universes are unstable due to the amplification of gravitational waves (GW). As an application of this general relativity effect, we consider a pre-inflationary anisotropic geometry characterized by a Kasner-like expansion, which is driven dynamically towards inflation by a scalar field. We investigate the evolution of linear metric fluctuations around this background, and calculate the amplification of the long-wavelength GW of a certain polarization during the anisotropic expansion (this effect is absent for another GW polarization, and for scalar fluctuations). These GW are superimposed to the usual tensor modes of quantum origin from inflation, and are potentially observable if the total number of inflationary e-folds exceeds the minimum required to homogenize the observable universe only by a small margin. Their contribution to the temperature anisotropy angular power spectrum decreases with the multipole l as l^(-p), where p depends on the slope of the initial GW power-spectrum. Constraints on the long-wavelength GW can be translated into limits on the total duration of inflation and the initial GW amplitude. The instability of classical GW (and zero-vacuum fluctuations of gravitons) during Kasner-like expansion (or contraction) may have other interesting applications. In particular, if GW become non-linear, they can significantly alter the geometry before the onset of inflation

    Current status of cosmological MDM model

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    An analysis of cosmological models in spatially flat Friedmann Universe with cosmic gravitational wave background and zero Λ\Lambda-term is presented. The number of free parameters is equal to 5, they are σ8\sigma_8, nn, Ων\Omega_\nu, Ωb\Omega_b, and hh. The normalization of the spectrum of density perturbations on galaxy cluster abundance (σ8=0.52±0.04\sigma_8 = 0.52\pm 0.04) has been used to calculate numerically the value of the large scale CMB anisotropy (ℓ≃10\ell\simeq 10) and the relative contribution of cosmological gravitational waves T/S. Increasing Ων\Omega_\nu weaken the requirements to the value of T/S, however even for Ων≤0.4\Omega_\nu\le 0.4 the models with h+n≥1.5h+n\ge 1.5 suggest considerable abundance of gravitational waves: T/S∼>0.3{}^>_\sim 0.3. In models with Ων≤0.4\Omega_\nu\le 0.4 and scale-invariant spectrum of density perturbations (n=1n=1): T/S∼>10(h−0.47){}^>_\sim 10(h-0.47). Minimization of the value T/S is possible only in the range of the red spectra (n<1n<1) and small hh (<0.6<0.6). It is shown that the models with T/S∈[0,3]\in [0, 3] admit both moderate red and blue spectra of density perturbations, n∈[0.9,1.2]n\in[0.9,1.2], with rather high abundance hot dark matter, Ων∈[0.2,0.4]\Omega_\nu\in [0.2,0.4]. Any condition, n<0.9n<0.9 or Ων<0.2\Omega_\nu<0.2, decreases the relative amplitude of the first acoustic peak for more than 30% in comparison with its hight in the standard CDM normalized by COBE data.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures included; contribution to the Proceedings of Moriond 2000 "Energy Densities in the Universe", Les Arcs, France, January 22-29 200

    Lambda-inflation and CMB anisotropy

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    We explore a broad class of three-parameter inflationary models, called the Λ\Lambda-inflation, and its observational predictions: high abundance of cosmic gravitational waves consistent with the Harrison-Zel'dovich spectrum of primordial cosmological perturbations, the non-power-law wing-like spectrum of matter density perturbations, high efficiency of these models to meet current observational tests, and others. We show that a parity contribution of the gravitational waves and adiabatic density perturbations into the large-scale temperature anisotropy, T/S ∼1\sim 1, is a common feature of Λ\Lambda-inflation; the maximum values of T/S (basically not larger than 10) are reached in models where (i) the local spectrum shape of density perturbations is flat or slightly red (nS∼<1n_S{}_\sim^< 1), and (ii) the residual potential energy of the inflaton is near the GUT scale (V01/4∼1016GeVV_0^{{1/4}} \sim 10^{16} GeV). The conditions to find large T/S in the paradigm of cosmic inflation and the relationship of T/S to the ratio of the power spectra, rr, and to the inflationary γ\gamma and Hubble parameters, are discussed. We argue that a simple estimate, T/S≃3r≃12γ≃(H6×1013GeV)2\simeq 3r\simeq 12\gamma \simeq (\frac{H}{6\times 10^{13}{\rm GeV}})^2, is true for most known inflationary solutions and allows to relate straightforwardly the important parameters of observational and physical cosmology.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures include
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