Predictions from Star Formation in the Multiverse
Raphael Bousso, Stefan Leichenauer

TL;DR
This paper calculates probability distributions for key cosmological parameters in the multiverse, using advanced star formation models and different measures, to understand the likelihood of observed universe properties.
Contribution
It introduces a refined multiverse star formation model and compares multiple measures and observer scenarios, providing comprehensive probability distributions for cosmological parameters.
Findings
Observed parameters are within 2σ of most distributions.
Results depend weakly on observer models, strongly on measures.
Causal patch measure aligns well with observed data.
Abstract
We compute trivariate probability distributions in the landscape, scanning simultaneously over the cosmological constant, the primordial density contrast, and spatial curvature. We consider two different measures for regulating the divergences of eternal inflation, and three different models for observers. In one model, observers are assumed to arise in proportion to the entropy produced by stars; in the others, they arise at a fixed time (5 or 10 billion years) after star formation. The star formation rate, which underlies all our observer models, depends sensitively on the three scanning parameters. We employ a recently developed model of star formation in the multiverse, a considerable refinement over previous treatments of the astrophysical and cosmological properties of different pocket universes. For each combination of observer model and measure, we display all single and…
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