Abstract
We use recent COBE observational limits on departures of the spectrum of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) from a pure blackbody curve to constrain models of galaxy formation. The damping of adiabatic density perturbations at high redshifts (z∼105) injects energy into the primordial plasma which cannot be thermalized and therefore distorts the CMB spectrum. We find that we can eliminate flat (Ω0 = 1) baryon-dominated models with power-law primordial fluctuations having n > 4 and open (Ω0 = 0.1) baryonic models with n > 1. The results complement other constraints from microwave background temperature anisotropics, nucleosynthesis and galaxy clustering and, taken together, they suggest very strongly that there is either a preponderance of non-baryonic dark matter, a non-zero cosmological constant, a source of isocurvature (rather than adiabatic) fluctuations in the early Universe or some other source of density perturbations, such as non-superconducting cosmic strings.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Barrow, J. D., & Coles, P. (1991). Primordial density fluctuations and the microwave background spectrum. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 248(1), 52–57. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/248.1.52
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