The latest cosmological data seem to indicate a significant deviation from
scale invariance of the primordial power spectrum when parameterized either by
a power law or by a spectral index with non-zero "running". This deviation, by
itself, serves as a powerful tool to discriminate among theories for the origin
of cosmological structures such as inflationary models. Here, we use a
minimally-parametric smoothing spline technique to reconstruct the shape of the
primordial power spectrum. This technique is well-suited to search for smooth
features in the primordial power spectrum such as deviations from scale
invariance or a running spectral index, although it would recover sharp
features of high statistical significance. We use the WMAP 3 year results in
combination with data from a suite of higher resolution CMB experiments
(including the latest ACBAR 2008 release), as well as large-scale structure
data from SDSS and 2dFGRS. We employ cross-validation to assess, using the data
themselves, the optimal amount of smoothness in the primordial power spectrum
consistent with the data. This minimally-parametric reconstruction supports the
evidence for a power law primordial power spectrum with a red tilt, but not for
deviations from a power law power spectrum. Smooth variations in the primordial
power spectrum are not significantly degenerate with the other cosmological
parameters.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, JCAP. Minor changes to match published versio