Inflation with a Planck-scale frequency cutoff
- 2 May 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 63 (12) , 123502
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.63.123502
Abstract
The implementation of a Planck-scale high frequency and short wavelength cutoff in quantum theories on expanding backgrounds may have potentially nontrivial implications, such as the breaking of local Lorentz invariance and the existence of a yet unknown mechanism for the creation of vacuum modes. In scenarios where inflation begins close to the cutoff scale, these effects could have observable consequences as trans-Planckian modes are redshifted to cosmological scales. In close analogy with similar studies of Hawking radiation, a simple theory of a minimally coupled scalar field in de Sitter space is studied, with a high frequency cutoff imposed by a nonlinear dispersion relation. Under certain conditions the model predicts deviations from the standard inflationary scenario. We also comment on the difficulties in generalizing fluid models of Hawking radiation to cosmological space-times.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trans-Planckian Redshifts and the Substance of the Space-Time RiverProgress of Theoretical Physics Supplement, 1999
- Computing the spectrum of black hole radiation in the presence of high frequency dispersion: An analytical approachPhysical Review D, 1998
- theory as a matrix model: A conjecturePhysical Review D, 1997
- Hawking spectrum and high frequency dispersionPhysical Review D, 1996
- Hawking radiation without trans-Planckian frequenciesPhysical Review D, 1995
- Sonic analogue of black holes and the effects of high frequencies on black hole evaporationPhysical Review D, 1995
- Black-hole evaporation and ultrashort distancesPhysical Review D, 1991
- Experimental Black-Hole Evaporation?Physical Review Letters, 1981
- Particle creation by black holesCommunications in Mathematical Physics, 1975
- Black hole explosions?Nature, 1974