First order inflation
Sep, 199046 pages
Published in:
- Phys.Scripta T 36 (1991) 199-217
Contribution to:
Report number:
- FERMILAB-CONF-90-195-A
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Abstract: (IOP)
In the original proposal, inflation occurred in the process of a strongly first-order phase transition. This model was soon demonstrated to be fatally flawed. Subsequent models for inflation involved phase transitions that were second-order, or perhaps weakly first-order; some even involved no phase transition at all. Recently the possibility of inflation during a strongly first-order phase transition has been revived. In this talk I will discuss some models for first-order inflation, and emphasize unique signatures that result if inflation is realized in a first-order transition. Before discussing first-order inflation, I will briefly review some of the history of inflation to demonstrate how first-order inflation differs from other models.- talk: Graeftavallen 1990/06/11
- inflation
- critical phenomena
- astrophysics
- Brans-Dicke model
- field theory: scalar
- gravitation
- Kaluza-Klein model
- perturbation theory: density
- baryon: production
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