The big bang as a result of the first-order phase transition driven by a change of the scalar curvature in an expanding early Universe: The “hyperinflation” scenario
- Authors: Pashitskii E.A.1, Pentegov V.I.1
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Affiliations:
- Institute of Physics
- Issue: Vol 122, No 1 (2016)
- Pages: 52-62
- Section: Nuclei, Particles, Fields, Gravitation, and Astrophysics
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7761/article/view/189672
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063776116010076
- ID: 189672
Cite item
Abstract
We suggest that the Big Bang could be a result of the first-order phase transition driven by a change in the scalar curvature of the 4D spacetime in an expanding cold Universe filled with a nonlinear scalar field φ and neutral matter with an equation of state p = νε (where p and ε are the pressure and energy density of the matter, respectively). We consider the Lagrangian of a scalar field with nonlinearity φ4 in a curved spacetime that, along with the term–ξR|φ|2 quadratic in φ (where ξ is the interaction constant between the scalar and gravitational fields and R is the scalar curvature), contains the term ξRφ0(φ + φ+) linear in φ, where φ0 is the vacuum mean of the scalar field amplitude. As a consequence, the condition for the existence of extrema of the scalar-field potential energy is reduced to an equation cubic in φ. Provided that ν > 1/3, the scalar curvature R = [κ(3ν–1)ε–4Λ] (where κ and Λ are Einstein’s gravitational and cosmological constants, respectively) decreases with decreasing ε as the Universe expands, and a first-order phase transition in variable “external field” parameter proportional to R occurs at some critical value Rc < 0. Under certain conditions, the critical radius of the early Universe at the point of the first-order phase transition can reach an arbitrary large value, so that this scenario of unrestricted “inflation” of the Universe may be called “hyperinflation.” After the passage through the phase-transition point, the scalar-field potential energy should be rapidly released, which must lead to strong heating of the Universe, playing the role of the Big Bang.
About the authors
E. A. Pashitskii
Institute of Physics
Author for correspondence.
Email: pashitsk@iop.kiev.ua
Ukraine, pr. Nauki 46, Kiev, 03028
V. I. Pentegov
Institute of Physics
Email: pashitsk@iop.kiev.ua
Ukraine, pr. Nauki 46, Kiev, 03028
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