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Very small mean curvature is a robust prediction of inflation worth rigorous checking. Since current constraints are derived from determinations of the angular-diameter distance to the CMB last-scattering surface, which is also affected by dark energy, they are limited by our understanding of the dark energy. Measurements of luminosity or angular-diameter distances to redshifts in the matter-dominated era can greatly reduce this uncertainty. With a 1% measurement of the distance to z=3, combined with the CMB data expected from Planck, one can achieve (₊h^2) 10^-3. A nonzero detection at this level would be evidence against inflation or for unusually large curvature fluctuations on super-Hubble scales.
Lloyd Knox (Fri,) studied this question.
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