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1.3.3 Cosmological Constant
Inflation is the only known solution to the horizon and flatness
problems and the avoidance of too many GUT monopoles. And inflation
has the added bonus that at no extra charge (except the perhaps
implausibly fine-tuned adjustment of the self-coupling of the inflaton
field to be adequately small), simple inflationary models predict a
near-Zel'dovich primordial spectrum (i.e.,
Pp(k)
knp
with np
1)
of adiabatic Gaussian primordial
fluctuations - which seems to be consistent with observations. All simple
inflationary models predict that the curvature is vanishingly small,
although inflationary models that are extremely contrived (at least,
to my mind) can be constructed with negative curvature and therefore
0
1 without a cosmological
constant (see Section 1.6.6 below).
Thus most authors who consider inflationary models impose the
condition k = 0, or
0 +
= 1
where
/
(3H02). This is what is assumed in
CDM models, and it is what
was assumed in Figure 1.2.
(Note that
is used to refer only to
the density of matter and energy, not including the cosmological
constant, whose contribution in
units is
The idea of a nonvanishing
is commonly considered unattractive.
There is no known physical reason why
should be so small (
= 1 corresponds to
~ 10-12 eV4, which is small
from the viewpoint of particle physics),
though there is also no known reason why it should vanish (cf.
Weinberg 1989,
1996).
A very unattractive feature of
0 cosmologies
is the fact that
must become
important only at relatively low redshift - why not much earlier or much
later? Also
0
implies that the universe has recently entered an
inflationary epoch (with a de Sitter horizon comparable to
the present horizon). The main motivations for
>
0 cosmologies are (1) reconciling inflation with
observations that seem to imply
0 < 1, and (2)
avoiding a contradiction between the lower limit t0
13 Gyr from globular clusters and t0 =
(2/3)H0-1 = 6.52
h-1 Gyr for the standard
=
1,
= 0
Einstein-de Sitter cosmology, if it is really true that h > 0.5.
The cosmological effects of a cosmological constant are not difficult
to understand
(Lahav et al. 1991;
Carroll, Press, &
Turner 1992).
In the early universe, the density of energy and matter is far more
important than the term on
the r.h.s. of the Friedmann
equation. But the average matter density decreases as the universe
expands, and at a rather low redshift (z ~ 0.2 for
0 = 0.3) the
term finally becomes
dominant. If it has been adjusted just right,
can almost balance the
attraction of the matter, and the expansion nearly stops: for a long
time, the scale factor a
(1 + z)-1 increases very slowly,
although it ultimately starts increasing exponentially as the universe
starts inflating under the influence of the increasingly dominant
term (see
Figure 1.1). The
existence of a period during which
expansion slows while the clock runs explains why t0
can be greater
than for
= 0, but this also
shows that there is an increased
likelihood of finding galaxies at the redshift interval when the
expansion slowed, and a correspondingly increased opportunity for
lensing of quasars (which mostly lie at higher redshift z
2) by these galaxies.
The frequency of such lensed quasars is about what would be expected
in a standard = 1,
= 0 cosmology, so this data sets
fairly stringent upper limits:
0.70 at 90% C.L.
(Maoz & Rix 1993,
Kochanek 1993),
with more recent data giving even
tighter constraints:
< 0.66 at 95% confidence if
0 +
= 1
(Kochanek 1996b).
This limit could
perhaps be weakened if there were (a) significant extinction by dust
in the E/S0 galaxies responsible for the lensing or (b) rapid
evolution of these galaxies, but there is much evidence that these
galaxies have little dust and have evolved only passively for
z
1
(Steidel,
Dickinson, & Persson 1994;
Lilly et al. 1995;
Schade et al. 1996).
(An alternative analysis by
Im, Griffiths, &
Ratnatunga 1997
of some of the same optical lensing data considered by
Kochanek 1996b
leads them to deduce a value
= 0.64-0.26+0.15, which is barely consistent with
Kochanek's upper limit. A recent paper -
Malhotra, Rhodes,
& Turner 1997 -
presents evidence for extinction of quasars by foreground galaxies and
claims that this weakens the lensing bound to
< 0.9,
but there is no quantitative discussion in the paper to justify this claim.
Maller, Flores, &
Primack 1997
shows that edge-on disk
galaxies can lens quasars very effectively, and discusses a case in
which optical extinction is significant. But the radio observations
discussed by
Falco, Kochanek, &
Munoz 1997,
which give a 2
limit
< 0.73, will not be
affected by extinction.)
Yet another constraint comes from number counts of bright E/S0
galaxies in HST images
(Driver et al. 1996),
since as was just mentioned
these galaxies appear to have evolved rather little since z ~ 1.
The number counts are just as expected in the = 1,
= 0
Einstein-de Sitter cosmology. Even allowing for uncertainties due to
evolution and merging of these galaxies, this data would allow
as large as 0.8 in flat
cosmologies only in the
unlikely event that half the Sa galaxies in the deep HST images were
misclassified as E/S0. This number-count approach may be very
promising for the future, as the available deep HST image data and our
understanding of galaxy evolution both increase.
A model-dependent constraint comes from a detailed simulation of
CDM
(Klypin, Primack,
& Holtzman 1996,
hereafter KPH96): a
COBE-normalized model with
0 = 0.3,
= 0.7,
and h = 0.7 has far too much
power on small scales to be consistent with observations, unless there
is unexpectedly strong scale-dependent antibiasing of galaxies with
respect to dark matter. (This is discussed in more detail in
Section 1.7.4 below.) For
CDM models, the
simplest solution appears to be raising
0, lowering H0,
and tilting the spectrum (np < 1), though of course one could
alternatively modify the primordial power spectrum in other ways.
Figure 1.2 shows that with
0.7, the cosmological
constant does not lead to a very large increase in t0
compared to
the Einstein-de Sitter case, although it may still be enough to be
significant. For example, the constraint that t0
13 Gyr
requires h
0.5 for
= 1
and
= 0, but this becomes
h
0.70 for flat cosmologies
with
0.66.