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Cosmological Inflation: A Personal PerspectiveApproximately twenty five years ago a novel proposal was made to explain two of the outstanding cosmological conundrums, namely those of the Horizon Problem and the Flatness Problem of the Universe. These are the fact that widely separated parts of the sky that have never been in causal contact during the evolution of the Universe have apparently the same CMB temperature and the fact that the mean density of the Universe is very close to the critical one, i.e. very close to the density that separates the closed and open models. These coincidences implied that the corresponding initial condition of the Universe must have been set to exquisite accuracy. This novel proposal posted that at these very early times, the energy density of the Universe was dominated by a fluid which had the equation state attributed to the vacuum (i.e. dominated by tension rather than pressure) and that this led to an exponential expansion of the Universe which was "inflated" by many orders of magnitude of its original size. It was then shown that this "inflation" could provide a resolution of the above outstanding problems. The talk will cover the speaker's personal perspective and contributions to this idea and the subsequent developments over the following 25 years since its inception.
Document ID
20080032729
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Kazanas, D.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
September 17, 2007
Subject Category
Astronomy
Meeting Information
Meeting: Chaos in Astronomy Symposium
Location: Athens
Country: Greece
Start Date: September 17, 2007
End Date: September 20, 2007
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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