4.6 Article

Spatial curvature falsifies eternal inflation

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2012/06/029

Keywords

inflation; CMBR theory

Funding

  1. NSF [PHY-0645435]

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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 vertical bar Omega(k)vertical bar > 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.

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