Cosmological Challenges in Theories with Extra Dimensions and Remarks on the Horizon Problem
Daniel J. H. Chung, Katherine Freese

TL;DR
This paper explores how extra-dimensional brane-world models can significantly alter standard cosmology, revealing observational inconsistencies and the need for fine-tuning, while also discussing implications for the horizon problem and causality.
Contribution
It demonstrates that most brane-world cosmologies deviate from FRW behavior and require fine-tuning for stabilization, providing explicit examples and analyzing implications for the horizon problem.
Findings
Most models are observationally inconsistent with standard cosmology.
Explicit example of a model reproducing FRW cosmology on the brane.
Stabilization of extra dimensions demands unrealistic fine-tuning.
Abstract
We consider the cosmology that results if our observable universe is a 3-brane in a higher dimensional universe. In particular, we focus on the case where our 3-brane is located at the symmetry fixed plane of a symmetric five-dimensional spacetime, as in the Ho\v{r}ava-Witten model compactified on a Calabi-Yau manifold. As our first result, we find that there can be substantial modifications to the standard Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) cosmology; as a consequence, a large class of such models is observationally inconsistent. In particular, any relationship between the Hubble constant and the energy density on our brane is possible, including (but not only) FRW. Generically, due to the existence of the bulk and the boundary conditions on the orbifold fixed plane, the relationship is not FRW, and hence cosmological constraints coming from big bang nucleosynthesis,…
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