Chaotic Inflation theory

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The Chaotic Inflation theory, is a variety of the Inflationary universe model, which is itself an outgrowth (or extension) of the Big bang theory. Chaotic Inflation, proposed by physicist Andrei Linde, models our universe as one of many that grew as part of a multiverse owing to a vacuum that had not decayed to its ground state. In this theory, the peaks in the evolution of a scalar field (determining the energy of the vacuum) correspond to regions of rapid inflation which dominate, creating "bubble universes," making the structure of space fractal on the very largest scales, likely at scales larger than the observable universe. Chaotic Inflation (along with some other types of inflation) is usually a sub-class of eternal inflation[1], since the expansion of the inflationary peaks exhibit positive feedback and come to dominate the large scale dynamics of the universe. Alan Guth's 2007 paper, Eternal inflation and its implications[1] details what is now known on the subject, and demonstrates that this particular flavor of Inflationary universe theory is relatively current, or is still considered viable, more than 20 years after its inception.

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[edit] History

Cosmic inflation, or the inflationary universe theory, was developed as a way to overcome the few remaining problems with what was otherwise considered a successful theory of Cosmology, the Big Bang model. It is now known that Alexei Starobinsky, at the L.D. Landau Institute of Theoretical Physics in Moscow developed the first realistic Inflation theory in 1979[2] but with a different name. Due to political difficulties in the former Soviet Union, regarding the free exchange of scientific knowledge, most scientists outside the USSR remained ignorant about Starobinsky’s work until years later. Starobinsky's model was relatively complicated, however, and said little about how the inflation process could start.

In 1979 Alan Guth of the United States developed an inflationary model independently, which did offer a mechanism for inflation to begin, the decay of a so-called False vacuum into 'bubbles' of 'true vacuum' that expanded at the speed of light. Guth coined the term, “inflation,” and he was the first to discuss the theory with other scientists worldwide. But this formulation was clearly imperfect, as well. Guth’s model predicted chaotically colliding ‘bubbles,’ which are not found in the real universe so his initial theory decidedly needed improvement. See:- Developments of theory. In 1982, Andrei Linde improved Guth’s model and called his theory, "The new inflationary universe scenario."

Not long after, working independently at the University of Pennsylvania, Andreas Albrecht and Paul J. Steinhardt developed, verified, or discovered the same theory, but Linde did not stop there. In 1986, he published a paper entitled "Eternally Existing Self-Reproducing Chaotic Inflationary Universe,"[3] which provides a detailed description of what has become known as the Chaotic Inflation theory or eternal inflation. The Chaotic Inflation theory is in some ways similar to Fred Hoyle’s Steady state theory, as it employs the metaphor of a universe that is eternally existing, and thus does not require a unique beginning or an ultimate end of the cosmos.

[edit] Quantum fluctuations

Chaotic Inflation theory, models quantum fluctuations in the rate of cosmic inflation[4]. Those regions with a higher rate of inflation expand faster and dominate the universe, despite the natural tendency of inflation to end in other regions. This allows inflation to continue forever, to produce future-eternal inflation.

Within the framework of established knowledge of physics and cosmology, our universe could be one of many in a super-universe or multiverse. Linde (1990, 1994) has proposed that a background space-time "foam" empty of matter and radiation will experience local quantum fluctuations in curvature, forming many bubbles of false vacuum that individually inflate into mini-universes with random characteristics. Each universe within the multiverse can have a different set of constants and physical laws. Some might have life of a form different from ours; others might have no life at all or something even more complex or so different that we cannot even imagine it. Obviously we are in one of those universes with life.

Due to quantum uncertainty energy fluctuations such as electron and its anti-particle a positron can arise spontaneously out of nothing but must disappear rapidly. The lower the energy of the bubble is the longer it can exist. A gravitational field has negative energy. Matter has positive energy. The 2 figures cancel out provided the universe is completely flat. In that case the universe has zero energy and can theoretically last forever.

More recently past-eternal models have been proposed which adhere to the perfect cosmological principle and have features of the steady state cosmos.[5][6] [3] The universe may also decay.

[edit] Differential decay

In standard inflation, inflationary expansion occurred while the universe was in a false vacuum state, halting when the universe decayed to a true vacuum state. The bubble universe model proposes that different parts of this inflationary universe (termed a multiverse) decayed at different times, with decaying regions corresponding to universes not in causal contact with each other.

[edit] False vacuum and true vacuum

Variants of the bubble universe model postulate multiple false vacuum states, which result in lower-energy false-vacuum child universes spawned, which in turn produce true vacuum state child universes within themselves.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Guth, Alan; Eternal inflation and its implications arXiv:hep-th/0702178
  2. ^ Linde, Andrei - The Self-Reproducing Inflationary Universe - Scientific American - November 1994 pg. 51
  3. ^ Linde, A.D. - Eternally Existing Self-Reproducing Chaotic Inflationary Universe - Physics Letters B - August 1986
  4. ^ A. Linde (1986). "Eternal Chaotic Inflation". Mod. Phys. Lett. A1. 
  5. ^ Anthony Aguirre, Steven Gratton, Inflation without a beginning: A null boundary proposal, Phys.Rev. D67 (2003) 083515, [1]
  6. ^ Anthony Aguirre, Steven Gratton, Steady-State Eternal Inflation, Phys.Rev. D65 (2002) 083507, [2]

[edit] See also

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