Predictability crisis in inflationary cosmology and its resolution
- 15 March 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 61 (8) , 083507
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.61.083507
Abstract
Models of inflationary cosmology can lead to variation of observable parameters (“constants of nature”) on extremely large scales. The question of making probabilistic predictions for today’s observables in such models has been investigated in the literature. Because of the infinite thermalized volume resulting from eternal inflation, it has proved difficult to obtain a meaningful and unambiguous probability distribution for observables, in particular due to the gauge dependence. In the present paper, we further develop the gauge-invariant procedure proposed in a previous work for models with a continuous variation of “constants.” The recipe uses an unbiased selection of a connected piece of the thermalized volume as sample for the probability distribution. To implement the procedure numerically, we develop two methods applicable to a reasonably wide class of models: one based on the Fokker-Planck equation of stochastic inflation and the other based on direct simulation of inflationary spacetime. We present and compare results obtained using these methods.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do we live in the center of the world?Physics Letters B, 1995
- Predictions from Quantum CosmologyPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- Stationarity of inflation and predictions of quantum cosmologyPhysical Review D, 1995
- From the big bang theory to the theory of a stationary universePhysical Review D, 1994
- Implications of the Copernican principle for our future prospectsNature, 1993
- Time and the Anthropic PrincipleMind, 1992
- InflationPhysics Reports, 1990
- Particle Physics and Inflationary CosmologyPublished by Taylor & Francis ,1990
- Eternally existing self-reproducing chaotic inflanationary universePhysics Letters B, 1986
- Birth of inflationary universesPhysical Review D, 1983