Phys. Rev. D 70, 103513 (2004) [21 pages]Origin of the large scale structures of the universeReceived 2 August 2003; revised 13 September 2004; published 15 November 2004 We revise the statistical properties of the primordial cosmological density anisotropies that, at the time of matter-radiation equality, seeded the gravitational development of large scale structures in the otherwise homogeneous and isotropic Friedmann-Robertson-Walker flat universe. Our analysis shows that random fluctuations of the density field at the same instant of equality and with comoving wavelength shorter than the causal horizon at that time can naturally account, when globally constrained to conserve the total mass (energy) of the system, for the observed scale invariance of the anisotropies over cosmologically large comoving volumes. Statistical systems with similar features are generically known as glasslike or latticelike. Obviously, these conclusions conflict with the widely accepted understanding of the primordial structures reported in the literature, which requires an epoch of inflationary cosmology to precede the standard expansion of the universe. The origin of the conflict must be found in the widespread, but unjustified, claim that scale invariant mass (energy) anisotropies at the instant of equality over comoving volumes of cosmological size, larger than the causal horizon at the time, must be generated by fluctuations in the density field with comparably large comoving wavelength. © 2004 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.70.103513
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.70.103513
PACS:
98.65.Dx, 05.40.–a, 98.80.Cq
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