English

UV/IR mode mixing and the CMB

High Energy Physics - Theory 2009-11-05 v2 Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

It is well understood that spatial non-commutativity, if indeed realized in nature, is a phenomenon whose effects are not just felt at energy scales comparable to the non-commutativity scale. Loop effects can transmit signatures of any underlying non-commutativity to macroscopic scales (a manifestation of a phenomenon that has come to be known as UV/IR mode mixing) and offer a potential lever to constrain the amount of non-commutativity present in nature, if present at all. Field theories defined on non-commutative spaces (realized in string theory when D-branes are coupled to backgrounds of non-trivial RR background flux), can exhibit strong UV/IR mode mixing, manifesting in a non-local one loop effective action. In the context of inflation in the presence of any background non-commutativity, we demonstrate how this UV/IR mixing at the loop level can allow us to place severe constraints on the scale of non-commutativity if we presume inflation is responsible for large scale structure. We demonstrate that any amount of non-commutativity greatly suppresses the CMB power at all observable scales, {\it independent} of the scale of inflation, and independent of whether or not the non-commutativity tensor redshifts during inflation, therefore nullifying a very salient and successful prediction of inflation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0906.4727,
  title  = {UV/IR mode mixing and the CMB},
  author = {Gonzalo A. Palma and Subodh P. Patil},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.4727},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Version to appear in Phys. Rev. D; references added, 11 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX4

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