Abstract
The standard, scale-invariant, inflationary perturbation spectrum will be modified if the effects of trans-Planckian physics are incorporated into the dynamics of the matter field in a phenomenological manner, say, by the modification of the dispersion relation. The spectrum also changes if we retain the standard dynamics but modify the initial quantum state of the matter field. We show that, given any spectrum of perturbations, it is possible to choose a class of initial quantum states which can exactly reproduce this spectrum with the standard dynamics. We provide an explicit construction of the quantum state which will produce the given spectrum. We find that the various modified spectra that have been recently obtained from “trans-Planckian considerations” can be constructed from suitable squeezed states above the Bunch-Davies vacuum in the standard theory. Hence, the CMB observations can, at most, be useful in determining the initial state of the matter field in the standard theory, but it can not help us to discriminate between the various Planck scale models of matter fields. We study the problem in the Schrodinger picture and determine the criterion for negligible back reaction due to modified initial conditions.
- Received 20 August 2004
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.71.103512
©2005 American Physical Society