English

Decoupling Inflation From the String Scale

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2010-09-03 v2 High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

When Inflation is embedded in a fundamental theory, such as string theory, it typically begins when the Universe is already substantially larger than the fundamental scale [such as the one defined by the string length scale]. This is naturally explained by postulating a pre-inflationary era, during which the size of the Universe grew from the fundamental scale to the initial inflationary scale. The problem then arises of maintaining the [presumed] initial spatial homogeneity throughout this era, so that, when it terminates, Inflation is able to begin in its potential-dominated state. Linde has proposed that a spacetime with compact negatively curved spatial sections can achieve this, by means of chaotic mixing. Such a compactification will however lead to a Casimir energy, which can lead to effects that defeat the purpose unless the coupling to gravity is suppressed. We estimate the value of this coupling required by the proposal, and use it to show that the pre-inflationary spacetime is stable, despite the violation of the Null Energy Condition entailed by the Casimir energy.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0911.4583,
  title  = {Decoupling Inflation From the String Scale},
  author = {Brett McInnes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0911.4583},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

24 pages, 5 eps figures, references added, stylistic changes, version to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity

R2 v1 2026-06-21T14:15:19.769Z