Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Frequently used symbols
- Preface
- 1 Overview
- Part I Relativity
- Part II The Universe after the first second
- Part III Field theory
- Part IV Inflation and the early Universe
- 18 Slow-roll inflation
- 19 Inflation with modified gravity
- 20 Multi-field dynamics
- 21 Reheating and phase transitions
- 22 Thermal equilibrium and the origin of baryon number
- 23 Cold dark matter and dark energy
- 24 Generating field perturbations at horizon exit
- 25 Generating ζ at horizon exit
- 26 Generating ζ after horizon exit
- 27 Generating primordial isocurvature perturbations
- 28 Slow-roll inflation and observation
- 29 Perspective
- Appendix A Spherical functions
- Appendix B Constants and parameters
- Index
25 - Generating ζ at horizon exit
from Part IV - Inflation and the early Universe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Frequently used symbols
- Preface
- 1 Overview
- Part I Relativity
- Part II The Universe after the first second
- Part III Field theory
- Part IV Inflation and the early Universe
- 18 Slow-roll inflation
- 19 Inflation with modified gravity
- 20 Multi-field dynamics
- 21 Reheating and phase transitions
- 22 Thermal equilibrium and the origin of baryon number
- 23 Cold dark matter and dark energy
- 24 Generating field perturbations at horizon exit
- 25 Generating ζ at horizon exit
- 26 Generating ζ after horizon exit
- 27 Generating primordial isocurvature perturbations
- 28 Slow-roll inflation and observation
- 29 Perspective
- Appendix A Spherical functions
- Appendix B Constants and parameters
- Index
Summary
We have seen how the vacuum fluctuation of each light scalar field is converted to a classical perturbation at the time of horizon exit. One or more of these perturbations should in turn generate the curvature perturbation ζ, that is probed by observation when cosmological scales begin to enter the horizon.
In this chapter we are going to consider the simplest scenario, where the curvature perturbation already achieves its final value a few Hubble times after horizon exit. In other words, we are going to consider the scenario in which ζ is constant during the entire era when the smoothing scale is outside the horizon. According to Section 5.4.2, this means that the locally defined pressure is a unique function of the locally defined energy density throughout that era. This is achieved in a single-field inflation model, if at each position the field value a few Hubble times after horizon exit determines the subsequent pressure and energy density. During inflation, this is the same thing as saying that the trajectory φ(x, t) is independent of x, up to a shift in t. In other words, it is the same as saying that the inflationary trajectory is an attractor. After inflation though, it would be possible for some other light field to play a significant role. We shall assume in this chapter that such is not the case.
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- The Primordial Density PerturbationCosmology, Inflation and the Origin of Structure, pp. 404 - 423Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009