Signatures of the Very Early Universe: Inflation, Spatial Curvature and Large Scale Anomalies

Abstract

A short inflationary phase may not erase all traces of the primordial universe. Associated observables include both spatial curvature and "anomalies" in the microwave background or large scale structure. The present curvature K,0 reflects the initial curvature, K,start, and the angular size of anomalies depends on kstart, the comoving horizon size at the onset of inflation. We estimate posteriors for K,start and kstart using current data and simulations, and show that if either quantity is measured to have a non-zero value, both are likely to be observable. Mappings from K,start and kstart to present-day observables depend strongly on the primordial equation of state; K,0 spans ten orders of magnitude for a given K,start while a simple and general relationship connects K,0 and kstart. We show that current bounds on K,0 imply that if kstart is measurable, the curvature was already small when inflation began. Finally, since the energy density changes slowly during inflation, primordial gravitational wave constraints require that a short inflationary phase is preceded by a nontrivial pre-inflationary phase with critical implications for the expected value of K,start.

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