Top Banner
Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation Paul McFadden Universiteit van Amsterdam First String Meeting 5/11/10
29

Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Sep 12, 2021

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Observational signaturesof holographic modelsof inflation

Paul McFadden

Universiteit van Amsterdam

First String Meeting 5/11/10

Page 2: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

This talk

I. Cosmological observables & non-Gaussianity

II. Holographic models of inflation

III. Observational signatures

Page 3: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

References

This talk is based on work with Kostas Skenderis:

• Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation,arxiv:1010.0244.

• The holographic universe, arxiv:1001.2007.

• Holography for cosmology, arxiv:0907.5542.

• Holographic non-Gaussianity, to appear shortly.

... and on-going work also with Adam Bzowski.

Page 4: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

From quantum fluctuations to galaxies

Page 5: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Imaging the primordial perturbations

COBE (1989)

Page 6: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Imaging the primordial perturbations

WMAP (2001)

Page 7: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Imaging the primordial perturbations

Planck (2009)

Page 8: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Primordial perturbations

The primordial perturbations offer some of our best clues as to thefundamental physics underlying the big bang. Their form is surprisinglysimple:

• Small amplitude: δT/T ∼ 10−5

• Adiabatic

• Nearly Gaussian

• Nearly scale-invariant

I Any proposed cosmological model must be able to account for thesebasic features.

I Any predicted deviations (e.g. from Gaussianity) are likely to provecritical in distinguishing different models.

Page 9: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

The power spectrum

A Gaussian distribution is fully characterised by its 2-point function orpower spectrum. From observations, the power spectrum takes the form:

∆2S(q) = ∆2

S(q0) (q/q0)nS−1

The WMAP data yield (for q0 = 0.002Mpc−1)

∆2S(q0) = (2.445± 0.096)× 10−9, nS−1 = −0.040± 0.013,

i.e., the scalar perturbations have small amplitude and are nearly scaleinvariant.

I These two small numbers should appear naturally in any theory thatexplains the data.

Page 10: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

The bispectrum

Non-Gaussianity implies non-zero higher-point correlation functions.

The lowest order (hence easiest to measure) statistic is the 3-pointfunction, or bispectrum, of curvature perturbations ζ:

〈ζ(q1)ζ(q2)ζ(q3)〉 = (2π)3δ(∑

qi)B(qi)

The amplitude of the bispectrum B(qi) is parametrised by fNL:

B(qi) = fNL × (shape function)

Page 11: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Non-Gaussianity

Non-Gaussianity arises from nonlinearities in cosmological evolution. Thethree primary sources are:

1. Nonlinearities (interactions) in inflationary dynamics.

2. Nonlinear evolution of perturbations in radiation/matter era.

3. Nonlinearities in relationship between metric perturbations and CMBtemperature fluctuations. (To linear order, ∆T/T = (1/3)Φ).

Primordial non-Gaussianity is especially important as it allows us toconstrain inflationary dynamics:

I Different models make different predictions for fNL and the shapefunction. e.g., single field slow-roll inflation fNL ∼ O(ε, η) ∼ 0.01.

Page 12: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Observational constraints

From WMAP 7-yr data: f localNL = 32± 21, fequilNL = 26± 140

I ‘Local’ form:

Blocal(qi) = f localNL

6

5A2

∑q3i∏q3i

, A = 2π2∆2S(q).

I ‘Equilateral’ form:

Bequil(qi) = fequilNL

18

5A2 1∏

q3i

(−∑

q3i −2q1q2q3 +(q1q

22 +perms)

).

The Planck data (expected next year) should be sensitive to fNL ∼ 5.

Non-Gaussianity potentially provides a strong test of inflationary models.

Page 13: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

II. Holographic models of inflation

Page 14: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

A holographic universe

Recently, we proposed a holographic description of 4d inflationaryuniverses in terms of a 3d quantum field theory without gravity.

I For conventional inflation, this dual QFT is strongly coupled.

I When the dual QFT is instead weakly coupled, we can model auniverse which is non-geometric at very early times.

In particular:

• These latter models provide a new mechanism for obtaining a nearlyscale-invariant power spectrum.

• They are compatible with current observations, yet have a distinctphenomenology from conventional (slow-roll) inflation.

• The Planck data has the power to confirm or exclude these models.

Page 15: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Holography

Any quantum theory of gravity should have a dual description interms of a quantum field theory (QFT), without gravity, living inone dimension less.

Any holographic proposal for cosmology should specify:

1. The nature of the dual QFT

2. How to compute cosmological observables

(e.g. the primordial power spectrum & bispectrum)

Page 16: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Holographic framework

Our holographic framework for cosmology is based on standardgauge/gravity duality plus specific analytic continuations:

Page 17: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Holographic formulae

Via the holographic framework, cosmological observables are related tospecific analytic continuations of QFT correlators:

∆2S(q) =

−q3

4π2Im[〈T (−iq)T (iq)〉]

B(qi) = −1

4

1∏i Im[〈T (−iqi)T (iqi)〉]

Im[〈T (−iq1)T (−iq2)T (−iq3)〉

+∑i

〈T (iqi)T (−iqi)〉 − 2(〈T (−iq1)Υ(−iq2,−iq3)〉+ cyclic perms)

)]

where T is the trace of the QFT stress tensor and Υ = δijδklδTij/δgkl.

Page 18: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Holographic phenomenology

Prototype dual QFT:

I 3d SU(N) Yang-Mills theory + scalars + fermions.

I Parameters: g2YM; the number of colours, N ; QFT field content.

Theory simplifies in ’t Hooft limit: N � 1 but g2YMN fixed.

To make predictions:

1. Compute correlation functions using perturbative QFT.

2. Apply holographic formulae to find cosmological observables.

3. Compare with observational data.

Page 19: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

III. Observational signatures

Page 20: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Power spectrum

I To compute the cosmological power spectrum we need to evaluatethe 2-pt function of Tij .

I The leading contribution is at 1-loop order:

〈T (q)T (−q)〉 ∼ N2q3

I Recalling the holographic formula,

∆2S ∼

q3

〈TT 〉∼ 1

N2

Page 21: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Power spectrum

I Spectrum scale invariant to leading order, independent of details ofholographic theory.

Moreover,

I The amplitude of the power spectrum ∆2S(q0) ∼ 1/N2.

I Small observed amplitude ∆2S(q0) ∼ 10−9 ⇒ N ∼ 104, justifying

the large N limit.

A complete calculation gives ∆2S(q0) = 16/π2N2(NA +Nφ), where

NA = # gauge fields, Nφ = # minimal scalars.

Page 22: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Spectral index

2-loop corrections give rise to a small deviation from scale invariance:

nS − 1 ∼ g2eff = g2

YMN/q.

The observed value nS − 1 ∼ 10−2 is thenconsistent with QFT being weakly interacting.

I To determine whether nS < 1 (red-tilted) or nS > 1 (blue-tilted)requires summing all 2-loop graphs, and will in general depend onthe field content of the dual QFT.

[Work in progress]

Page 23: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Running

I Irrespective of the details of the theory, the spectral index runs:

αS = dnS/d ln q = −(nS−1) +O(g4eff).

I This prediction is qualitatively different from slow-roll inflation, forwhich αs/(nS − 1) is of first-order in slow roll.

I Running of this form is consistent with current data, and should beeither confirmed or excluded by Planck.

⇒ Observational signature #1

Page 24: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Constraints on running

Solid line:

α = −(ns−1)

Page 25: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Tensor-to-scalar ratio

I Holographic model predicts

r =∆2T

∆2S

= 32

(NA +Nφ +Nχ +Nψ

NA +Nφ

)

where NA = # gauge fields, Nφ = # minimally coupled scalars,Nχ = # conformally coupled scalars, Nψ = # fermions.

I An upper bound on r translates into a constraint on the fieldcontent of the dual QFT.

I r is not parametrically suppressed as in slow-roll inflation, nor does itsatisfy the slow-roll consistency condition r = −8nT .

Page 26: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Non-Gaussianity

Evaluating the QFT 3-pt function, ourholographic formula predicts a bispectrumof exactly the equilateral form:

B(qi) = Bequil(qi), fequilNL = 5/36.

⇒ Observational signature #2

I This result is independent of all details of the theory.

I Result probably too small for direct detection by Planck, but theobservation of larger fNL values would exclude our models.

Page 27: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Conclusions

I 4d inflationary universes may be described holographically in termsof dual non-gravitational 3d QFT.

I When dual QFT is weakly coupled obtain new holographic modelswith the following universal features:

1. Near scale-invariant spectrum of small amplitude perturbations.

2. The spectral index runs as αs = −(ns − 1).

3. The bispectrum is of the equilateral form with fequilNL = 5/36.

I Holographic models are testable: both predictions 2 and 3 may beexcluded by the Planck data released next year.

Page 28: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

Outlook

Page 29: Observational signatures of holographic models of inflation

The scenario