An introduction to inflation and cosmological perturbation theory

Apr, 2009
19 pages
Published in:
  • Curr.Sci. 97 (2009) 868
e-Print:

Citations per year

20102014201820222024024681012
Abstract: (arXiv)
This article provides an introductory review of inflation and cosmological perturbation theory. I begin by motivating the need for an epoch of inflation during the early stages of the radiation dominated era, and describe how inflation is typically achieved using scalar fields. Then, after an overview of linear cosmological perturbation theory, I derive the equations governing the perturbations, and outline the generation of the scalar and the tensor perturbations during inflation. I illustrate that slow roll inflation naturally leads to an almost scale invariant spectrum of perturbations, a prediction that seems to be in remarkable agreement with the measurements of the anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background. I describe the constraints from the recent observations on some of the more popular models of inflation. I conclude with a brief discussion on the status and certain prospects of the inflationary paradigm.
Note:
  • Revtex, 19 pages, 3 figures, Invited review for Current Science
  • review
  • inflation: perturbation theory
  • spectrum: perturbation
  • scale: invariance
  • perturbation: scalar
  • perturbation: tensor
  • cosmic background radiation: anisotropy
  • field theory: scalar
  • slow-roll approximation
  • numerical calculations: interpretation of experiments