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The · 2014. 6. 23. · Alan Guth Massachusetts Institute of T echnology Science and Engineering Program for T eachers, J une 23, 2014 {5{The repulsive-gravit y material is unstable,

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  • The Big Bang Picture

    The universe as we know it began 13-14 billion years ago. (Latestestimate: 13:82� 0:05 billion years!)

    Initial state was a hot, dense, uniform soup of particles that �lledspace uniformly, and was expanding rapidly.

    What existed before that? Who knows?

    It is often said that time itself began at the big bang. That is apossibility, but we really don't know.

    Within about 10�35 second or less, ination began.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {1{

  • The Big Bang Picture

    The universe as we know it began 13-14 billion years ago. (Latestestimate: 13:82� 0:05 billion years!)

    Initial state was a hot, dense, uniform soup of particles that �lledspace uniformly, and was expanding rapidly.

    What existed before that? Who knows?

    It is often said that time itself began at the big bang. That is apossibility, but we really don't know.

    Within about 10�35 second or less, ination began.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {1{

  • The Big Bang Picture

    The universe as we know it began 13-14 billion years ago. (Latestestimate: 13:82� 0:05 billion years!)

    Initial state was a hot, dense, uniform soup of particles that �lledspace uniformly, and was expanding rapidly.

    What existed before that? Who knows?

    It is often said that time itself began at the big bang. That is apossibility, but we really don't know.

    Within about 10�35 second or less, ination began.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {1{

  • The Big Bang Picture

    The universe as we know it began 13-14 billion years ago. (Latestestimate: 13:82� 0:05 billion years!)

    Initial state was a hot, dense, uniform soup of particles that �lledspace uniformly, and was expanding rapidly.

    What existed before that? Who knows?

    It is often said that time itself began at the big bang. That is apossibility, but we really don't know.

    Within about 10�35 second or less, ination began.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {1{

  • The Big Bang Picture

    The universe as we know it began 13-14 billion years ago. (Latestestimate: 13:82� 0:05 billion years!)

    Initial state was a hot, dense, uniform soup of particles that �lledspace uniformly, and was expanding rapidly.

    What existed before that? Who knows?

    It is often said that time itself began at the big bang. That is apossibility, but we really don't know.

    Within about 10�35 second or less, ination began.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {1{

  • The Big Bang Picture

    The universe as we know it began 13-14 billion years ago. (Latestestimate: 13:82� 0:05 billion years!)

    Initial state was a hot, dense, uniform soup of particles that �lledspace uniformly, and was expanding rapidly.

    What existed before that? Who knows?

    It is often said that time itself began at the big bang. That is apossibility, but we really don't know.

    Within about 10�35 second or less, ination began.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {1{

  • What is Inflation?

    Ination is a \prequel" to the conventional big bang picture.

    In particular, ination is a theory about the bang of the big bang.That is, ination is a possible answer to the question of whatpropelled the gigantic expansion of the big bang.

    Before the possibility of ination was known, big bang theoristsdid not attempt to explain the expansion. It was just assumed.

    Ination explains the expansion by means of

    Gravitational Repulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {2{

  • What is Inflation?

    Ination is a \prequel" to the conventional big bang picture.

    In particular, ination is a theory about the bang of the big bang.That is, ination is a possible answer to the question of whatpropelled the gigantic expansion of the big bang.

    Before the possibility of ination was known, big bang theoristsdid not attempt to explain the expansion. It was just assumed.

    Ination explains the expansion by means of

    Gravitational Repulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {2{

  • What is Inflation?

    Ination is a \prequel" to the conventional big bang picture.

    In particular, ination is a theory about the bang of the big bang.That is, ination is a possible answer to the question of whatpropelled the gigantic expansion of the big bang.

    Before the possibility of ination was known, big bang theoristsdid not attempt to explain the expansion. It was just assumed.

    Ination explains the expansion by means of

    Gravitational Repulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {2{

  • What is Inflation?

    Ination is a \prequel" to the conventional big bang picture.

    In particular, ination is a theory about the bang of the big bang.That is, ination is a possible answer to the question of whatpropelled the gigantic expansion of the big bang.

    Before the possibility of ination was known, big bang theoristsdid not attempt to explain the expansion. It was just assumed.

    Ination explains the expansion by means of

    Gravitational Repulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {2{

  • What is Inflation?

    Ination is a \prequel" to the conventional big bang picture.

    In particular, ination is a theory about the bang of the big bang.That is, ination is a possible answer to the question of whatpropelled the gigantic expansion of the big bang.

    Before the possibility of ination was known, big bang theoristsdid not attempt to explain the expansion. It was just assumed.

    Ination explains the expansion by means of

    Gravitational Repulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {2{

  • Two Miracles of Physics

    Ination relies on two miraculous properties of gravity. The �rst is:

    1) Gravitational Repulsion!

    Since the advent of general relativity, physicists have known thatgravity can act repulsively. Einstein used this option, in theform of the cosmological constant, to build a static mathematicalmodel of the universe, with repulsive gravity preventing itscollapse. Modern particle physics suggests that at superhighenergies there should exist materials that create gravitationalrepulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {3{

  • Two Miracles of Physics

    Ination relies on two miraculous properties of gravity. The �rst is:

    1) Gravitational Repulsion!

    Since the advent of general relativity, physicists have known thatgravity can act repulsively. Einstein used this option, in theform of the cosmological constant, to build a static mathematicalmodel of the universe, with repulsive gravity preventing itscollapse. Modern particle physics suggests that at superhighenergies there should exist materials that create gravitationalrepulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {3{

  • Two Miracles of Physics

    Ination relies on two miraculous properties of gravity. The �rst is:

    1) Gravitational Repulsion!

    Since the advent of general relativity, physicists have known thatgravity can act repulsively. Einstein used this option, in theform of the cosmological constant, to build a static mathematicalmodel of the universe, with repulsive gravity preventing itscollapse. Modern particle physics suggests that at superhighenergies there should exist materials that create gravitationalrepulsion.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {3{

  • Gravitational Repulsion

    According to general relativity, a gravitational �eld can be created by pressures,as well as energy densities (or mass densities).

    As you might guess, positive pressures (i.e., normal pressures) produceattractive gravitational �elds.

    But negative pressures | i.e., a suction | produce repulsive gravitational�elds.

    For a symmetric universe, the size is described by a scale factor a(t), whichobeys the equation

    d2a

    dt2= �4�G

    ��+

    3p

    c2

    �a ;

    where G = Newton's constant, � = mass density, p = pressure, and c = thespeed of light.

    If the energy is dominated by the potential energy of a �eld, then p = ��c2

    and the sign of gravity becomes repulsive.{4{

  • Sequence of Events

    Ination proposes that a patch of repulsive gravity material existedin the early universe | for ination at the grand uni�ed theoryscale, the patch needs to be only as large as 10�28 cm. (Sinceany such patch is enlarged fantastically by ination, the initialdensity or probability of such patches can be very low.)

    The gravitational repulsion was the driving force behind the bigbang. The patch was driven into exponential expansion, with adoubling time of maybe � 10�38 second.

    The patch expanded exponentially by a factor of at least 1028

    (100 doubling times), but it could have expanded much more. Atthe end, the region destined to become the presently observeduniverse was about the size of a marble.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {5{

  • The repulsive-gravity material is unstable, so it decayed likea radioactive substance, ending ination. The decay releasedenergy which produced ordinary particles, forming a hot, dense\primordial soup." The universe continued to coast and coolfrom then onward.

    Key feature: During the exponential expansion, the density ofmatter and energy did NOT thin out.

    Although more and more mass/energy appeared as the repulsive-gravity material expanded, total energy was conserved! HOW????

    Miracle of Physics #2:

    The energy of a gravitational field is negative!!

    The negative energy of gravity cancelled the positive energy ofmatter, so the total energy was constant and possibly zero.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {6{

  • The repulsive-gravity material is unstable, so it decayed likea radioactive substance, ending ination. The decay releasedenergy which produced ordinary particles, forming a hot, dense\primordial soup." The universe continued to coast and coolfrom then onward.

    Key feature: During the exponential expansion, the density ofmatter and energy did NOT thin out.

    Although more and more mass/energy appeared as the repulsive-gravity material expanded, total energy was conserved! HOW????

    Miracle of Physics #2:

    The energy of a gravitational field is negative!!

    The negative energy of gravity cancelled the positive energy ofmatter, so the total energy was constant and possibly zero.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {6{

  • The repulsive-gravity material is unstable, so it decayed likea radioactive substance, ending ination. The decay releasedenergy which produced ordinary particles, forming a hot, dense\primordial soup." The universe continued to coast and coolfrom then onward.

    Key feature: During the exponential expansion, the density ofmatter and energy did NOT thin out.

    Although more and more mass/energy appeared as the repulsive-gravity material expanded, total energy was conserved! HOW????

    Miracle of Physics #2:

    The energy of a gravitational field is negative!!

    The negative energy of gravity cancelled the positive energy ofmatter, so the total energy was constant and possibly zero.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {6{

  • The repulsive-gravity material is unstable, so it decayed likea radioactive substance, ending ination. The decay releasedenergy which produced ordinary particles, forming a hot, dense\primordial soup." The universe continued to coast and coolfrom then onward.

    Key feature: During the exponential expansion, the density ofmatter and energy did NOT thin out.

    Although more and more mass/energy appeared as the repulsive-gravity material expanded, total energy was conserved! HOW????

    Miracle of Physics #2:

    The energy of a gravitational field is negative!!

    The negative energy of gravity cancelled the positive energy ofmatter, so the total energy was constant and possibly zero.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {6{

  • The repulsive-gravity material is unstable, so it decayed likea radioactive substance, ending ination. The decay releasedenergy which produced ordinary particles, forming a hot, dense\primordial soup." The universe continued to coast and coolfrom then onward.

    Key feature: During the exponential expansion, the density ofmatter and energy did NOT thin out.

    Although more and more mass/energy appeared as the repulsive-gravity material expanded, total energy was conserved! HOW????

    Miracle of Physics #2:

    The energy of a gravitational field is negative!!

    The negative energy of gravity cancelled the positive energy ofmatter, so the total energy was constant and possibly zero.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {6{

  • Schematically,

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {7{

  • {8{

  • Evidence for Inflation

    1) Large scale uniformity. The cosmic background radiation is

    uniform in temperature to one part in 100,000. It was releasedwhen the universe was about 380,000 years old. In standard cos-mology without ination, a mechanism to establish this uniformitywould need to transmit energy and information at about 100 timesthe speed of light.

    Inflationary Solution: In inationary models, the universe

    begins so small that uniformity is easily established | just likethe air in the lecture hall spreading to �ll it uniformly. Thenination stretches the region to be large enough to include thevisible universe.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {9{

  • Evidence for Inflation

    1) Large scale uniformity. The cosmic background radiation is

    uniform in temperature to one part in 100,000. It was releasedwhen the universe was about 380,000 years old. In standard cos-mology without ination, a mechanism to establish this uniformitywould need to transmit energy and information at about 100 timesthe speed of light.

    Inflationary Solution: In inationary models, the universe

    begins so small that uniformity is easily established | just likethe air in the lecture hall spreading to �ll it uniformly. Thenination stretches the region to be large enough to include thevisible universe.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {9{

  • 2) \Flatness problem:"

    Why was the early universe so FLAT?

    What is meant by \at"?

    Flat does not mean 2-dimensional.

    Flat means Euclidean, as opposed to thenon-Euclidean curved spaces that are alsoallowed by Einstein's general relativity.

    3-dimensional curved spaces are hard tovisualize, but they are analogous to the2-dimensional curved surfaces shown on theright.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {10{

  • 2) \Flatness problem:"

    Why was the early universe so FLAT?

    What is meant by \at"?

    Flat does not mean 2-dimensional.

    Flat means Euclidean, as opposed to thenon-Euclidean curved spaces that are alsoallowed by Einstein's general relativity.

    3-dimensional curved spaces are hard tovisualize, but they are analogous to the2-dimensional curved surfaces shown on theright.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {10{

  • 2) \Flatness problem:"

    Why was the early universe so FLAT?

    What is meant by \at"?

    Flat does not mean 2-dimensional.

    Flat means Euclidean, as opposed to thenon-Euclidean curved spaces that are alsoallowed by Einstein's general relativity.

    3-dimensional curved spaces are hard tovisualize, but they are analogous to the2-dimensional curved surfaces shown on theright.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {10{

  • 2) \Flatness problem:"

    Why was the early universe so FLAT?

    What is meant by \at"?

    Flat does not mean 2-dimensional.

    Flat means Euclidean, as opposed to thenon-Euclidean curved spaces that are alsoallowed by Einstein's general relativity.

    3-dimensional curved spaces are hard tovisualize, but they are analogous to the2-dimensional curved surfaces shown on theright.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {10{

  • According to general relativity, the atnessof the universe is related to its mass density:

    (Omega) =actual mass density

    critical mass density;

    where the \critical density" depends on theexpansion rate. = 1 is at, greaterthan 1 is closed, less than 1 is open.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {11{

  • A universe at the critical density is like a pencil balancing on itstip:

    If in the early universe was slightly below 1, it would rapidlyfall to zero | and no galaxies would form.

    If was slightly greater than 1, it would rapidly rise to in�nity,the universe would recollapse, and no galaxies would form.

    To be as close to critical density as we measure today, at onesecond after the big bang, must have been equal to one to 15decimal places!

    {12{

  • A universe at the critical density is like a pencil balancing on itstip:

    If in the early universe was slightly below 1, it would rapidlyfall to zero | and no galaxies would form.

    If was slightly greater than 1, it would rapidly rise to in�nity,the universe would recollapse, and no galaxies would form.

    To be as close to critical density as we measure today, at onesecond after the big bang, must have been equal to one to 15decimal places!

    {12{

  • Inflationary Solution: Since ination makes gravity become

    repulsive, the evolution of changes, too. is driven towardsone, extremely rapidly. It could begin at almost any value.

    Since the mechanism by which ination explains the atness ofthe early universe almost always overshoots, it predicts that eventoday the universe should have a critical density.

    Until 1998, observation pointed to � 0:2{0.3.

    Latest observation by Planck satellite (combined with otherastronomical observations):

    = 1:0010� 0:0065

    New ingredient: Dark Energy. In 1998 it was discovered that theexpansion of the universe has been accelerating for about the last5 billion years. The \Dark Energy" is the energy causing this tohappen.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014{13{

  • Inflationary Solution: Since ination makes gravity become

    repulsive, the evolution of changes, too. is driven towardsone, extremely rapidly. It could begin at almost any value.

    Since the mechanism by which ination explains the atness ofthe early universe almost always overshoots, it predicts that eventoday the universe should have a critical density.

    Until 1998, observation pointed to � 0:2{0.3.

    Latest observation by Planck satellite (combined with otherastronomical observations):

    = 1:0010� 0:0065

    New ingredient: Dark Energy. In 1998 it was discovered that theexpansion of the universe has been accelerating for about the last5 billion years. The \Dark Energy" is the energy causing this tohappen.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014{13{

  • Inflationary Solution: Since ination makes gravity become

    repulsive, the evolution of changes, too. is driven towardsone, extremely rapidly. It could begin at almost any value.

    Since the mechanism by which ination explains the atness ofthe early universe almost always overshoots, it predicts that eventoday the universe should have a critical density.

    Until 1998, observation pointed to � 0:2{0.3.

    Latest observation by Planck satellite (combined with otherastronomical observations):

    = 1:0010� 0:0065

    New ingredient: Dark Energy. In 1998 it was discovered that theexpansion of the universe has been accelerating for about the last5 billion years. The \Dark Energy" is the energy causing this tohappen.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014{13{

  • Inflationary Solution: Since ination makes gravity become

    repulsive, the evolution of changes, too. is driven towardsone, extremely rapidly. It could begin at almost any value.

    Since the mechanism by which ination explains the atness ofthe early universe almost always overshoots, it predicts that eventoday the universe should have a critical density.

    Until 1998, observation pointed to � 0:2{0.3.

    Latest observation by Planck satellite (combined with otherastronomical observations):

    = 1:0010� 0:0065

    New ingredient: Dark Energy. In 1998 it was discovered that theexpansion of the universe has been accelerating for about the last5 billion years. The \Dark Energy" is the energy causing this tohappen.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014{13{

  • Inflationary Solution: Since ination makes gravity become

    repulsive, the evolution of changes, too. is driven towardsone, extremely rapidly. It could begin at almost any value.

    Since the mechanism by which ination explains the atness ofthe early universe almost always overshoots, it predicts that eventoday the universe should have a critical density.

    Until 1998, observation pointed to � 0:2{0.3.

    Latest observation by Planck satellite (combined with otherastronomical observations):

    = 1:0010� 0:0065

    New ingredient: Dark Energy. In 1998 it was discovered that theexpansion of the universe has been accelerating for about the last5 billion years. The \Dark Energy" is the energy causing this tohappen.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014{13{

  • 3) Small scale nonuniformity: Can be measured in the cosmic

    background radiation. The intensity is almost uniform across thesky, but there are small ripples. Although these ripples are onlyat the level of 1 part in 100,000, these nonuniformities are nowdetectable! Where do they come from?

    Inflationary Solution: Ination attributes these ripples to

    quantum uctuations. Ination makes generic predictions forthe spectrum of these ripples (i.e., how the intensity varies withwavelength). The data measured so far agree beautifully withination.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {14{

  • 3) Small scale nonuniformity: Can be measured in the cosmic

    background radiation. The intensity is almost uniform across thesky, but there are small ripples. Although these ripples are onlyat the level of 1 part in 100,000, these nonuniformities are nowdetectable! Where do they come from?

    Inflationary Solution: Ination attributes these ripples to

    quantum uctuations. Ination makes generic predictions forthe spectrum of these ripples (i.e., how the intensity varies withwavelength). The data measured so far agree beautifully withination.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {14{

  • {15{

  • 4) Gravitational Waves Found by BICEP2(!): Along with density

    perturbations, ination also predicts gravitational waves.

    Quantum e�ects on very short length scales imply that thegravitational �eld | i.e., the metric of spacetime | isconstantly uctuating.

    Ination stretches these uctuations from microscopic toastronomical wavelengths, where they behave as classicalgravitational waves (as described by general relativity).

    The gravitational waves perturb the plasma of the earlyuniverse, imprinting a swirling pattern in the polarization ofthe cosmic microwave background, called B-modes. TheseB-modes were detected by BICEP2, but the result needs tobe corroborated.

    Gravitational waves have been called the \smoking gun" forination, as we currently do not know any other way theycould have been produced.

    {16{

  • Significance of Gravitational Waves

    First image of a gravitational wave. Previously we have detectedmissing energy attributed to gravitational radiation, but this isthe �rst con�rmation that gravitational waves look like what GRpredicts.

    First experimental evidence that gravity is quantized.

    Determines the energy scale of ination. BICEP2 found thatr = 0:20+0:07

    �0:05, where r is the ratio of the power in gravitationalwave perturbations to the power in density perturbations. If V isthe energy density of the universe at the time of ination, then

    �V (�hc)3

    �1=4= 2:2� 1016 GeV

    � r0:2

    �1=4:

    So V is right at the scale of grand uni�ed theories!{17{

  • Further Consequences of theGravitational Wave Discovery

    If the BICEP2 result is corroborated, then alternative ideas such as the \cyclicekpyrotic" model are o� the table.

    The measurement of r has a lot to say about detailed inationary models.Before BICEP2, both the WMAP team and the Planck team announcedindirect upper limits of r < 0:11. (The BICEP2 result, based on the directobservation of polarization, involves fewer assumptions, so hopefully the earlierclaims will be reconciled.) Previously the best-�t version of ination was theStarobinsky model. Now the best �t is much simpler, with a simple m2�2

    potential energy function for the scalar �eld that drove ination.

    The current announcement is only the beginning! Further study of primordialgravitational waves will allow us to learn a lot about the details of how inationhappened.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {18{

  • SUMMARY

    The Conventional Big Bang: Really describes only the aftermath of abang, beginning with a hot dense uniform soup of particles �llingan expanding space.

    Cosmic Ination: The prequel, describes how repulsive gravity |a consequence of negative pressure | could have driven a tinypatch of the early universe into exponential expansion. The totalenergy would be very small or maybe zero, with the negativeenergy of the cosmic gravitational �eld canceling the energy ofmatter.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {19{

  • Successes of inflation:

    1) Ination can explain the large-scale uniformity of the universe.(Cosmic microwave background (CMB) uniform to 1 part in100,000.)

    2) Ination can explain why � �=�crit = 1 was accurate to >15decimal places at t = 1 second. Predicts = 1. Data: =1:0010� 0:0065.

    3) Predicts small quantum uctuations in the mass density, whichcan be seen today as ripples in the CMB. Predictions agree verywell with data.

    4) Predicts gravitational waves, which can be observed through spe-ci�c swirling patterns in the polarization of the cosmic microwavebackground. Such patterns were recently observed by BICEP2,but have not yet been corroborated.

    Alan Guth

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Science and Engineering Program for Teachers, June 23, 2014 {20{