A Cosmology of the Brane World
Eanna E. Flanagan, S.-H. Henry Tye, Ira Wasserman (Cornell)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a cosmological model with extra dimensions and a radion field, describing a multi-stage universe evolution including inflation, reheating, and stabilization, consistent with observations and standard cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces a novel cosmological scenario involving variable extra dimensions and a radion field, detailing a multi-phase universe evolution compatible with current data.
Findings
The radion can be trapped at a small value early on.
Density fluctuations during inflation match observations.
The present-day radion mass is very small, around eV scale.
Abstract
We develop a possible cosmology for a Universe with n additional spatial dimensions of variable scale, and an associated scalar field, the radion, which is distinct from the field responsible for inflation, the inflaton. Based on a particular ansatz for the effective potential for the inflaton and radion (which may emerge in string theory), we show that the early expansion of the Universe may proceed in three stages. First, the radion becomes trapped at a value much smaller than the size of the extra dimensions today. Second, the Universe expands exponentially, but with a Planck mass smaller than its present value. Because the Planck mass during inflation is small, density fluctuations in agreement with observations can arise naturally. Third, when inflation ends, the Universe reheats, and the radion becomes free to expand once more. During the third phase the Universe is…
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