It is shown that the recently detected acceleration of the universe can be
understood by considering a modification of the teleparallel equivalent of
General Relativity (TEGR), with no need of dark energy. The solution also
exhibits phases dominated by matter and radiation as expected in the standard
cosmological evolution. We perform a joint analysis with measurements of the
most recent type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) peak
and estimates of the CMB shift parameter data to constraint the only new
parameter this theory has.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, replaced to match version to be published in
Physical Review
In this work we consider a wide variety of alternatives opened when applying the continuous spontaneous localization (CSL) dynamical collapse theory to the inflationary era. The definitive resolution of many of the issues discussed here will have to await, not only for a general relativistic CSL theory, but for a fully workable theory of quantum gravity. Our concern here is to explore these issues, and to warn against premature conclusions. This exploration includes: two different approaches to deal with quantum field theory and gravitation, the identification of the collapse-generating operator and the general nature and values of the parameters of the CSL theory. All the choices connected with these issues have the potential to dramatically alter the conclusions one can draw. We also argue that the incompatibilities found in a recent paper, between the CSL parameter values and the cosmic microwave background observational data, are associated with specific choices made for the extrapolation to the cosmological context of the CSL theory (as it is known to work in non-relativistic laboratory situations) which do not represent the most natural ones.
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