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This comprehensive textbook is devoted to classical and quantum
cosmology, with particular emphasis on modern approaches to quantum
gravity and string theory and on their observational imprint. It
covers major challenges in theoretical physics such as the big bang
and the cosmological constant problem. An extensive review of
standard cosmology, the cosmic microwave background, inflation and
dark energy sets the scene for the phenomenological application of
all the main quantum-gravity and string-theory models of cosmology.
Born of the author's teaching experience and commitment to bridging
the gap between cosmologists and theoreticians working beyond the
established laws of particle physics and general relativity, this
is a unique text where quantum-gravity approaches and string theory
are treated on an equal footing. As well as introducing cosmology
to undergraduate and graduate students with its pedagogical
presentation and the help of 45 solved exercises, this book, which
includes an ambitious bibliography of about 3500 items, will serve
as a valuable reference for lecturers and researchers.
This comprehensive textbook is devoted to classical and quantum
cosmology, with particular emphasis on modern approaches to quantum
gravity and string theory and on their observational imprint. It
covers major challenges in theoretical physics such as the big bang
and the cosmological constant problem. An extensive review of
standard cosmology, the cosmic microwave background, inflation and
dark energy sets the scene for the phenomenological application of
all the main quantum-gravity and string-theory models of cosmology.
Born of the author's teaching experience and commitment to bridging
the gap between cosmologists and theoreticians working beyond the
established laws of particle physics and general relativity, this
is a unique text where quantum-gravity approaches and string theory
are treated on an equal footing. As well as introducing cosmology
to undergraduate and graduate students with its pedagogical
presentation and the help of 45 solved exercises, this book, which
includes an ambitious bibliography of about 3500 items, will serve
as a valuable reference for lecturers and researchers.
Quantum gravity has developed into a fast-growing subject in
physics and it is expected that probing the high-energy and
high-curvature regimes of gravitating systems will shed some light
on how to eventually achieve an ultraviolet complete quantum theory
of gravity. Such a theory would provide the much needed information
about fundamental problems of classical gravity, such as the
initial big-bang singularity, the cosmological constant problem,
Planck scale physics and the early-time inflationary evolution of
our Universe. While in the first part of this book concepts of
quantum gravity are introduced and approached from different
angles, the second part discusses these theories in connection with
cosmological models and observations, thereby exploring which types
of signatures of modern and mathematically rigorous frameworks can
be detected by experiments. The third and final part briefly
reviews the observational status of dark matter and dark energy,
and introduces alternative cosmological models. Edited and authored
by leading researchers in the field and cast into the form of a
multi-author textbook at postgraduate level, this volume will be of
benefit to all postgraduate students and newcomers from neighboring
disciplines wishing to find a comprehensive guide for their future
research.
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