English

Inflation without quantum gravity

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2015-05-05 v2 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

It is sometimes argued that observation of tensor modes from inflation would provide the first evidence for quantum gravity. However, in the usual inflationary formalism, also the scalar modes involve quantised metric perturbations. We consider the issue in a semiclassical setup in which only matter is quantised, and spacetime is classical. We assume that the state collapses on a spacelike hypersurface, and find that the spectrum of scalar perturbations depends on the hypersurface. For reasonable choices, we can recover the usual inflationary predictions for scalar perturbations in minimally coupled single-field models. In models where non-minimal coupling to gravity is important and the field value is sub-Planckian, we do not get a nearly scale-invariant spectrum of scalar perturbations. As gravitational waves are only produced at second order, the tensor-to-scalar ratio is negligible. We conclude that detection of inflationary gravitational waves would indeed be needed to have observational evidence of quantisation of gravity.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1407.4691,
  title  = {Inflation without quantum gravity},
  author = {Tommi Markkanen and Syksy Rasanen and Pyry Wahlman},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1407.4691},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

18 pages, 1 figure. v2: Published version. Clarified text, fixed typos, added references, updated discussion of BICEP2 results

R2 v1 2026-06-22T05:06:39.555Z