Trace anomaly driven inflation

S. W. Hawking, T. Hertog, and H. S. Reall
Phys. Rev. D 63, 083504 – Published 5 March 2001
An article within the collection: The Work of Stephen Hawking in Physical Review
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Abstract

This paper investigates Starobinsky’s model of inflation driven by the trace anomaly of conformally coupled matter fields. This model does not suffer from the problem of contrived initial conditions that occurs in most models of inflation driven by a scalar field. The universe can be nucleated semiclassically by a cosmological instanton that is much larger than the Planck scale provided there are sufficiently many matter fields. There are two cosmological instantons: the four sphere and a new “double bubble” solution. This paper considers a universe nucleated by the four sphere. The AdS/CFT correspondence is used to calculate the correlation function for scalar and tensor metric perturbations during the ensuing de Sitter phase. The analytic structure of the scalar and tensor propagators is discussed in detail. Observational constraints on the model are discussed. Quantum loops of matter fields are shown to strongly suppress short scale metric perturbations, which implies that short distance modifications of gravity would probably not be observable in the cosmic microwave background. This is probably true for any model of inflation provided there are sufficiently many matter fields. This point is illustrated by a comparison of anomaly driven inflation in four dimensions and in a Randall-Sundrum brane-world model.

  • Received 1 November 2000

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.63.083504

©2001 American Physical Society

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This article appears in the following collection:

The Work of Stephen Hawking in Physical Review

To mark the passing of Stephen Hawking, we gathered together his 55 papers in Physical Review D and Physical Review Letters. They probe the edges of space and time, from "Black holes and thermodynamics” to "Wave function of the Universe."

Authors & Affiliations

S. W. Hawking* and T. Hertog

  • DAMTP, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, University of Cambridge, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge CB3 0WA, United Kingdom

H. S. Reall

  • Physics Department, Queen Mary and Westfield College, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, United Kingdom

  • *Email address: s.w.hawking@damtp.cam.ac.uk
  • Email address: t.hertog@damtp.cam.ac.uk
  • Email address: h.s.reall@qmw.ac.uk

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Issue

Vol. 63, Iss. 8 — 15 April 2001

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