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Phys. Rev. D 79, 023503 (2009) [14 pages]

Cosmological constraints on general, single field inflation

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Nishant Agarwal and Rachel Bean
Department of Astronomy, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA

Received 19 September 2008; published 7 January 2009

Inflation is now an accepted paradigm in standard cosmology, with its predictions consistent with observations of the cosmic microwave background. It lacks, however, a firm physical theory, with many possible theoretical origins beyond the simplest, canonical, slow-roll inflation, including Dirac-Born-Infeld inflation and k-inflation. We discuss how a hierarchy of Hubble flow parameters, extended to include the evolution of the inflationary sound speed, can be applied to compare a general, single field inflationary action with cosmological observational data. We show that it is important to calculate the precise scalar and tensor primordial power spectra by integrating the full flow and perturbation equations, since values of observables can deviate appreciably from those obtained using typical second-order Taylor expanded approximations in flow parameters. As part of this, we find that a commonly applied approximation for the tensor-to-scalar ratio, r≈16csϵ, becomes poor (deviating by as much as 50%) as cs deviates from 1 and hence the Taylor expansion including next-to-leading order contribution terms involving cs is required. By integrating the full flow equations, we use a Monte-Carlo-Markov-Chain approach to impose constraints on the parameter space of general single field inflation, and reconstruct the properties of such an underlying theory in light of recent cosmic microwave background and large-scale structure observations.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.79.023503
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.79.023503
PACS:
98.80.Cq