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Planck 2015 results. XX. Constraints on inflation

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In this article, the authors report on the implications for cosmic inflation of the 2018 Release of the Planck CMB anisotropy measurements, which are fully consistent with the two previous Planck cosmological releases, but have smaller uncertainties thanks to improvements in the characterization of polarization at low and high multipoles.
Abstract
We report on the implications for cosmic inflation of the 2018 Release of the Planck CMB anisotropy measurements. The results are fully consistent with the two previous Planck cosmological releases, but have smaller uncertainties thanks to improvements in the characterization of polarization at low and high multipoles. Planck temperature, polarization, and lensing data determine the spectral index of scalar perturbations to be $n_\mathrm{s}=0.9649\pm 0.0042$ at 68% CL and show no evidence for a scale dependence of $n_\mathrm{s}.$ Spatial flatness is confirmed at a precision of 0.4% at 95% CL with the combination with BAO data. The Planck 95% CL upper limit on the tensor-to-scalar ratio, $r_{0.002}<0.10$, is further tightened by combining with the BICEP2/Keck Array BK15 data to obtain $r_{0.002}<0.056$. In the framework of single-field inflationary models with Einstein gravity, these results imply that: (a) slow-roll models with a concave potential, $V" (\phi) < 0,$ are increasingly favoured by the data; and (b) two different methods for reconstructing the inflaton potential find no evidence for dynamics beyond slow roll. Non-parametric reconstructions of the primordial power spectrum consistently confirm a pure power law. A complementary analysis also finds no evidence for theoretically motivated parameterized features in the Planck power spectrum, a result further strengthened for certain oscillatory models by a new combined analysis that includes Planck bispectrum data. The new Planck polarization data provide a stringent test of the adiabaticity of the initial conditions. The polarization data also provide improved constraints on inflationary models that predict a small statistically anisotropic quadrupolar modulation of the primordial fluctuations. However, the polarization data do not confirm physical models for a scale-dependent dipolar modulation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Planck 2015 results - XIII. Cosmological parameters

Peter A. R. Ade, +337 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a cosmological analysis based on full-mission Planck observations of temperature and polarization anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planck 2015 results. XIII. Cosmological parameters

Peter A. R. Ade, +260 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present results based on full-mission Planck observations of temperature and polarization anisotropies of the CMB, which are consistent with the six-parameter inflationary LCDM cosmology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planck 2018 results. VI. Cosmological parameters

Nabila Aghanim, +232 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present cosmological parameter results from the full-mission Planck measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies, combining information from the temperature and polarization maps and the lensing reconstruction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planck 2018 results. VI. Cosmological parameters

Nabila Aghanim, +232 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the cosmological parameter results from the final full-mission Planck measurements of the CMB anisotropies were presented, with good consistency with the standard spatially-flat 6-parameter CDM cosmology having a power-law spectrum of adiabatic scalar perturbations from polarization, temperature, and lensing separately and in combination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of $B$-Mode Polarization at Degree Angular Scales by BICEP2

TL;DR: An excess of B-mode power over the base lensed-ΛCDM expectation is found in the range 30 < ℓ < 150, inconsistent with the null hypothesis at a significance of >5σ, and it is shown that systematic contamination is much smaller than the observed excess.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Particle physics models of inflation and the cosmological density perturbation

TL;DR: A review of particle-theory models of inflation, and their predictions for the primordial density perturbation that is thought to be the origin of structure in the Universe is given in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cosmic Linear Anisotropy Solving System (CLASS). Part II: Approximation schemes

TL;DR: Three approximations used by CLASS for basic �CDM models are described, namely: a baryon-photon tight-coupling approximation which can be set to first order, second order or to a compromise between the two; an ultra-relativistic fluid approximation which had not been implemented in public distributions before; and finally a radiation streaming approximation taking reionisation into account.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards the theory of reheating after inflation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated a simple model of a massive inflaton field coupled to another scalar field with the interaction term, and developed the theory of preheating taking into account the expansion of the universe and back reaction of produced particles, including the effects of rescattering.
Journal ArticleDOI

k-Inflation

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that a large class of higher-order (i.e., non-quadratic) scalar terms can drive an inflationary evolution starting from rather generic initial conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey. V. Improving the Dark-energy Constraints above z > 1 and Building an Early-type-hosted Supernova Sample

Nao Suzuki, +84 more
TL;DR: In this article, Advanced Camera for Surveys, NICMOS and Keck adaptive-optics-assisted photometry of 20 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Cluster Supernova Survey was presented.
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