Reconstructing the inflaton potential—an overview

James E. Lidsey, Andrew R. Liddle, Edward W. Kolb, Edmund J. Copeland, Tiago Barreiro, and Mark Abney
Rev. Mod. Phys. 69, 373 – Published 1 April 1997
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Abstract

The authors review the relation between the inflationary potential and the spectra of density waves (scalar perturbations) and gravitational waves (tensor perturbations) produced, with particular emphasis on the possibility of reconstructing the inflaton potential from observations. The spectra provide a potentially powerful test of the inflationary hypothesis; they are not independent but instead are linked by consistency relations reflecting their origin from a single inflationary potential. To lowest order in a perturbation expansion there is a single, now familiar, relation between the tensor spectral index and the relative amplitude of the spectra. The authors demonstrate that there is an infinite hierarchy of such consistency equations, though observational difficulties suggest only the first is ever likely to be useful. They also note that since observations are expected to yield much better information on the scalars than on the tensors, it is likely to be the next-order version of this consistency equation that will be appropriate, not the lowest-order one. If inflation passes the consistency test, one can then confidently use the remaining observational information to constrain the inflationary potential, and the authors survey the general perturbative scheme for carrying out this procedure. Explicit expressions valid to next-lowest order in the expansion are presented. The prospects for future observations' reaching the quality required are then briefly assessed and simulated data sets motivated by this outlook are considered.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.69.373

    ©1997 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    James E. Lidsey

    • Astronomy Unit, School of Mathematical Sciences,

    Andrew R. Liddle

    • Astronomy Centre, University of Sussex,

    Edward W. Kolb

    • NASA/Fermilab Astrophysics Center,
    • and Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics,

    Edmund J. Copeland and Tiago Barreiro

    • Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Sussex,

    Mark Abney

    • Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Enrico Fermi Institute,

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    Issue

    Vol. 69, Iss. 2 — April - June 1997

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