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1.6.6 Inflation with 0 < 1
Can inflation produce a region of negative curvature larger than our present
horizon - for example, a region with 0 < 1 and
= 0?
The old approach to this problem was to imagine that there might be
just enough inflation to solve the horizon problem, but not quite enough
to oversolve the flatness problem, e.g. N ~ 60
(Steinhardt 1990).
This requires fine tuning, but the real problem with this approach is
that the resulting region will not be smooth enough to agree with the
small size of the quadrupole anisotropy Q measured by COBE. According
to the
Grischuk-Zel'dovich (1978)
theorem (cf.
Garcia-Bellido et
al. 1995),
~ 1 fluctuations
on a super-horizon scale L > H0-1
imply Q ~ (L H0)-2.
COBE measured Qrms < 2 x 10-5, which
implies in turn
that the region containing our horizon must be homogeneous on a scale L
500
H0-1, i.e. N
70, |1
-
0|
10-4.
A new approach was discovered, based on the fact that a bubble
created from de Sitter space by quantum tunneling tends to be spherical
and homogeneous if the tunneling is sufficiently improbable. The
interior of such bubbles are quite empty, i.e., they are a region of
negative curvature with -> 0.
That was why, in ``old
inflation,'' the bubbles must collide to fill the universe with energy;
and the fact that this does not happen (because the bubbles grow only at
the speed of light while the space between them grows superluminally) was
fatal for that approach to inflation
(Guth
& Weinberg 1983). (3)
But now this
defect is turned into a virtue by arranging to have a second burst of
inflation inside the bubble, to drive the curvature back toward zero,
i.e.,
0 -> 1. By
tuning the amount of this second
period of inflation, it is possible to produce any desired value of
0
(Sasaki, Tanaka, &
Yamamoto 1995;
Bucher, Goldhaber,
& Turok 1995;
Yamamoto, Sasaki,
& Tanaka 1995).
The old problem of too much inhomogeneity beyond the horizon producing
too large a value of the quadrupole anisotropy is presumably solved
because the interior of the bubble produced in the first inflation is
very homogeneous.
I personally regard this as an existence proof that inflationary models
producing 0 ~ 0.3
(say) can be constructed which are not
obviously wrong. But I do not regard such contrived models as being as
theoretically attractive as the simpler models in which the universe after
inflation is predicted to be flat. (Somewhat simpler two-inflaton models
giving
0 < 1 have
been constructed by
Linde & Mezhlumian
1995.)
Note also that if varying amounts of inflation are possible, much greater
volume is occupied by the regions in which more inflation has occurred,
i.e., where
0
1. But the significance of such
arguments is uncertain, since no one knows whether volume is the appropriate
measure to apply in calculating the probability of our horizon having any
particular property.
The spectra of density fluctuations produced in inflationary models with
0 < 1 tend to have a
lot of power on very large scales.
However, when such spectra are normalized to the COBE CMB anisotropy
observations, the spherical harmonics with angular wavenumber
8 have the most weight
statistically, and all such models have
similar normalization
(Liddle et
al. 1996a).
3 Although there have been attempts to
revive Old
Inflation within scenarios in which the inflation is slower so that the
bubbles can collide, it remains to be seen whether any such
Extended Inflation model can be
sufficiently homogeneous to be entirely satisfactory.
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