Observable Signatures of a Classical Transition
Matthew C. Johnson, Wei Lin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how classical bubble collisions in eternal inflation could produce observable signatures like negative spatial curvature and CMB quadrupole anisotropies, potentially revealing the universe's origin from such transitions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical analysis of observable signatures from classical bubble transitions, including their dependence on collision energy and model parameters.
Findings
Classical transitions produce infinite open universes with specific observable signatures.
The CMB quadrupole and spatial curvature depend on observer position and collision energy.
Different inflationary energy hierarchies lead to distinct observable behaviors.
Abstract
Eternal inflation arising from a potential landscape predicts that our universe is one realization of many possible cosmological histories. One way to access different cosmological histories is via the nucleation of bubble universes from a metastable false vacuum. Another way to sample different cosmological histories is via classical transitions, the creation of pocket universes through the collision between bubbles. Using relativistic numerical simulations, we examine the possibility of observationally determining if our observable universe resulted from a classical transition. We find that classical transitions produce spatially infinite, approximately open Friedman-Robertson-Walker universes. The leading set of observables in the aftermath of a classical transition are negative spatial curvature and a contribution to the Cosmic Microwave Background temperature quadrupole. The level…
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