Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

Detecting topology in a nearly flat spherical universe

Jeffrey Weeks1, Roland Lehoucq2,3 and Jean-Philippe Uzan4,5

Show affiliations


When the density parameter is close to unity, the universe has a large curvature radius independent of its being hyperbolic or spherical, or in the limiting case of an infinite curvature radius, flat. Whatever the curvature, the universe may have either a simply connected or a multiply connected topology. In the flat case, the topology scale is arbitrary, and there is no a priori reason for this scale to be of the same order as the size of the observable universe. In the hyperbolic case, any nontrivial topology would almost surely be on a length scale too large to detect. In the spherical case, in contrast, the topology could easily occur on a detectable scale. The present paper shows how, in the spherical case, the assumption of a nearly flat universe simplifies the algorithms for detecting a multiply connected topology, but also reduces the amount of topology that can be seen. This is of primary importance for the upcoming cosmic microwave background data analysis.

This paper shows that for spherical spaces one may restrict the search to diametrically opposite pairs of circles in the circles-in-the-sky method and still detect the cyclic factor in the standard factorization of the holonomy group. This vastly decreases the algorithm's run time. If the search is widened to include pairs of candidate circles whose centres are almost opposite and whose relative twist varies slightly, then the cyclic factor along with a cyclic subgroup of the general factor may also be detected. Unfortunately, the full holonomy group is, in general, unobservable in a nearly flat spherical universe, and so a full six-parameter search is unnecessary. Crystallographic methods could also potentially detect the cyclic factor and a cyclic subgroup of the general factor, but nothing else.


PACS

02.40.-k Geometry, differential geometry, and topology

04.20.-q Classical general relativity

98.80.-k Cosmology

98.70.Vc Background radiations

MSC

83Cxx General relativity

83F05 Cosmology

Subjects

Mathematical physics

Gravitation and cosmology

Astrophysics and astroparticles

Dates

Issue 8 (21 April 2003)

Received 26 September 2003

Published 28 March 2003



  1. Detecting topology in a nearly flat spherical universe

    Jeffrey Weeks et al 2003 Class. Quantum Grav. 20 1529

  2. Noise analysis in magnetic resonance electrical impedance tomography at 3 and 11 T field strengths

    Rosalind Sadleir et al 2005 Physiol. Meas. 26 875

  3. Functional approach to (2 + 1)-dimensional gravity coupled to particles

    Luigi Cantini and Pietro Menotti 2003 Class. Quantum Grav. 20 845

  4. Assessment of 1-lead and 2-lead electrode patterns in electrical impedance endotomography

    Anne Fournier-Desseux and Jacques Jossinet 2005 Physiol. Meas. 26 337

  5. A parametric model of the relationship between EIT and total lung volume

    Nicolas Coulombe et al 2005 Physiol. Meas. 26 401

  6. Neural network based approach for anomaly detection in the lungs region by electrical impedance tomography

    Atul S Minhas and M Ramasubba Reddy 2005 Physiol. Meas. 26 489

  7. Spectroscopy study of the dynamics of the transencephalic electrical impedance in the perinatal brain during hypoxia

    Fernando Seoane et al 2005 Physiol. Meas. 26 849

  8. Anti-reflective optical coatings incorporating nanoparticles

    Kevin C Krogman et al 2005 Nanotechnology 16 S338

  9. Front-tracking image reconstruction algorithm for EIT-monitored cryosurgery using the boundary element method

    David M Otten and Boris Rubinsky 2005 Physiol. Meas. 26 503

  10. One-dimensional Fermi liquids

    J Voit 1995 Rep. Prog. Phys. 58 977

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.