Back-Reaction and the Trans-Planckian Problem of Inflation Revisited
Preprint
- 22 October 2004
Abstract
It has recently been suggested that Planck scale physics may effect the evolution of cosmological fluctuations in the early stages of cosmological inflation in a non-trivial way, leading to an excited state for modes whose wavelength is super-Planck but sub-Hubble. In this case, the issue of how this excited state back-reacts on the background space-time arises. In fact, it has been suggested that such back-reaction effects may lead to tight constraints on the magnitude of possible deviations from the usual predictions of inflation. In this note we discuss some subtle aspects of this back-reaction issue and point out that rather than preventing inflation, the back-reaction of ultraviolet fluctuations may simply lead to a renormalization of the cosmological constant driving inflation.Keywords
All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2004-10-22, ArXiv
- Published version: Physical Review D, 71 (2), 023504.
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: