What can the observation of nonzero curvature tell us?
Alan H. Guth, Yasunori Nomura

TL;DR
This paper investigates how future measurements of spatial curvature could inform us about the multiverse's properties, inflation history, and the nature of the potential, with implications for cosmological models and vacuum decay.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how nonzero curvature observations can constrain multiverse theories, inflation scenarios, and the correlation between tunneling and slow-roll potentials.
Findings
Positive curvature > -10^-4 excludes multiverse framework.
Negative curvature > 10^-4 suggests bubble nucleation and no diffusive eternal inflation.
Current curvature constraints are generally consistent with multiverse expectations.
Abstract
The eternally inflating multiverse provides a consistent framework to understand coincidences and fine-tuning in the universe. As such, it provides the possibility of finding another coincidence: if the amount of slow-roll inflation was only slightly more than the anthropic threshold, then spatial curvature might be measurable. We study this issue in detail, particularly focusing on the question: "If future observations reveal nonzero curvature, what can we conclude?" We find that whether an observable signal arises or not depends crucially on three issues: the cosmic history just before the observable inflation, the measure adopted to define probabilities, and the nature of the correlation between the tunneling and slow-roll parts of the potential. We find that if future measurements find positive curvature at \Omega_k < -10^-4, then the framework of the eternally inflating multiverse…
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