7 research outputs found
A Cosmological Bootstrap for Resonant Non-Gaussianity
Recent progress has revealed a number of constraints that cosmological
correlators and the closely related field-theoretic wavefunction must obey as a
consequence of unitarity, locality, causality and the choice of initial state.
When combined with symmetries, namely homogeneity, isotropy and scale
invariance, these constraints enable one to compute large classes of simple
observables, an approach known as (boostless) cosmological bootstrap. Here we
show that it is possible to relax the restriction of scale invariance, if one
retains a discrete scaling subgroup. We find an infinite class of solutions to
the weaker bootstrap constraints and show that they reproduce and extend
resonant non-Gaussianity, which arises in well-motivated models such as axion
monodromy inflation. We find no evidence of the new non-Gaussian shapes in the
Planck data. Intriguingly, our results can be re-interpreted as a deformation
of the scale-invariant case to include a complex order of the total energy
pole, or more evocatively interactions with a complex number of derivatives. We
also discuss for the first time IR-divergent resonant contributions and
highlight an inconsequential inconsistency in the previous literature.Comment: 33 pages, 3 figure
Perturbative Unitarity and the Wavefunction of the Universe
Unitarity of time evolution is one of the basic principles constraining
physical processes. Its consequences in the perturbative Bunch-Davies
wavefunction in cosmology have been formulated in terms of the cosmological
optical theorem. In this paper, we re-analyse perturbative unitarity for the
Bunch-Davies wavefunction, focusing on: 1) the role of the
-prescription and its compatibility with the requirement of
unitarity; 2) the origin of the different "cutting rules"; 3) the emergence of
the flat-space optical theorem from the cosmological one. We take the
combinatorial point of view of the cosmological polytopes, which provide a
first-principle description for a large class of scalar graphs contributing to
the wavefunctional. The requirement of the positivity of the geometry together
with the preservation of its orientation determine the
-prescription. In kinematic space it translates into giving a small
negative imaginary part to all the energies, making the wavefunction
coefficients well-defined for any value of their real part along the real axis.
Unitarity is instead encoded into a non-convex part of the cosmological
polytope, which we name optical polytope. The cosmological optical theorem
emerges as the equivalence between a specific polytope subdivision of the
optical polytope and its triangulations, each of which provides different
cutting rules. The flat-space optical theorem instead emerges from the
non-convexity of the optical polytope. On the more mathematical side, we
provide two definitions of this non-convex geometry, none of them based on the
idea of the non-convex geometry as a union of convex ones.Comment: 60 pages, figures in Tikz; v2: published version, minor corrections
and references adde
The Cosmological Bootstrap: Spinning Correlators from Symmetries and Factorization
We extend the cosmological bootstrap to correlators involving massless
particles with spin. In de Sitter space, these correlators are constrained both
by symmetries and by locality. In particular, the de Sitter isometries become
conformal symmetries on the future boundary of the spacetime, which are
reflected in a set of Ward identities that the boundary correlators must
satisfy. We solve these Ward identities by acting with weight-shifting
operators on scalar seed solutions. Using this weight-shifting approach, we
derive three- and four-point correlators of massless spin-1 and spin-2 fields
with conformally coupled scalars. Four-point functions arising from tree-level
exchange are singular in particular kinematic configurations, and the
coefficients of these singularities satisfy certain factorization properties.
We show that in many cases these factorization limits fix the structure of the
correlators uniquely, without having to solve the conformal Ward identities.
The additional constraint of locality for massless spinning particles manifests
itself as current conservation on the boundary. We find that the four-point
functions only satisfy current conservation if the s, t, and u-channels are
related to each other, leading to nontrivial constraints on the couplings
between the conserved currents and other operators in the theory. For spin-1
currents this implies charge conservation, while for spin-2 currents we recover
the equivalence principle from a purely boundary perspective. For multiple
spin-1 fields, we recover the structure of Yang-Mills theory. Finally, we apply
our methods to slow-roll inflation and derive a few phenomenologically relevant
scalar-tensor three-point functions.Comment: 128 pages, 15 figures; V3: minor corrections and references adde
The Cosmological Bootstrap: Weight-Shifting Operators and Scalar Seeds
A key insight of the bootstrap approach to cosmological correlations is the
fact that all correlators of slow-roll inflation can be reduced to a unique
building block---the four-point function of conformally coupled scalars,
arising from the exchange of a massive scalar. Correlators corresponding to the
exchange of particles with spin are then obtained by applying a spin-raising
operator to the scalar-exchange solution. Similarly, the correlators of
massless external fields can be derived by acting with a suitable
weight-raising operator. In this paper, we present a systematic and highly
streamlined derivation of these operators (and their generalizations) using
tools of conformal field theory. Our results greatly simplify the theoretical
foundations of the cosmological bootstrap program.Comment: 53 pages, 5 figures; V2: minor corrections and references adde
Linking the Singularities of Cosmological Correlators
Much of the structure of cosmological correlators is controlled by their
singularities, which in turn are fixed in terms of flat-space scattering
amplitudes. An important challenge is to interpolate between the singular
limits to determine the full correlators at arbitrary kinematics. This is
particularly relevant because the singularities of correlators are not directly
observable, but can only be accessed by analytic continuation. In this paper,
we study rational correlators, including those of gauge fields, gravitons, and
the inflaton, whose only singularities at tree level are poles and whose
behavior away from these poles is strongly constrained by unitarity and
locality. We describe how unitarity translates into a set of cutting rules that
consistent correlators must satisfy, and explain how this can be used to
bootstrap correlators given information about their singularities. We also
derive recursion relations that allow the iterative construction of more
complicated correlators from simpler building blocks. In flat space, all energy
singularities are simple poles, so that the combination of unitarity
constraints and recursion relations provides an efficient way to bootstrap the
full correlators. In many cases, these flat-space correlators can then be
transformed into their more complex de Sitter counterparts. As an example of
this procedure, we derive the correlator associated to graviton Compton
scattering in de Sitter space, though the methods are much more widely
applicable.Comment: 69+29 pages, 6 figure
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A cosmological bootstrap for resonant non-Gaussianity
Acknowledgements: We would like to thank Xingang Chen, Paolo Creminelli, Gerrit Farren, James Fergusson, Mehrdad Mirbabayi, Sebastien Renaux-Petel, Eva Silverstein, Wuhyun Sohn and Bowei Zhang for useful discussions. E.P. has been supported in part by the research program VIDI with Project No. 680-47-535, which is (partly) financed by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO). This work has been partially supported by STFC consolidated grant ST/T000694/1 and ST/X000664/1 and by the EPSRC New Horizon grant EP/V017268/1.Recent progress has revealed a number of constraints that cosmological correlators and the closely related field-theoretic wavefunction must obey as a consequence of unitarity, locality, causality and the choice of initial state. When combined with symmetries, namely homogeneity, isotropy and scale invariance, these constraints enable one to compute large classes of simple observables, an approach known as (boostless) cosmological bootstrap. Here we show that it is possible to relax the restriction of scale invariance, if one retains a discrete scaling subgroup. We find an infinite class of solutions to the weaker bootstrap constraints and show that they reproduce and extend resonant non-Gaussianity, which arises in well-motivated models such as axion monodromy inflation. We find no evidence of the new non-Gaussian shapes in the Planck data. Intriguingly, our results can be re-interpreted as a deformation of the scale-invariant case to include a complex order of the total energy pole, or more evocatively interactions with a complex number of derivatives. We also discuss for the first time IR-divergent resonant contributions and highlight an inconsequential inconsistency in the previous literature
Perturbative unitarity and the wavefunction of the Universe
Unitarity of time evolution is one of the basic principles constraining physical processes. Its consequences in the perturbative Bunch-Davies wavefunction in cosmology have been formulated in terms of the cosmological optical theorem. In this paper, we re-analyse perturbative unitarity for the Bunch-Davies wavefunction, focusing on: the role of the -prescription and its compatibility with the requirement of unitarity; the origin of the different ``cutting rules''; the emergence of the flat-space optical theorem from the cosmological one. We take the combinatorial point of view of the cosmological polytopes, which provide a first-principle description for a large class of scalar graphs contributing to the wavefunctional. The requirement of the positivity of the geometry together with the preservation of its orientation determine the -prescription. In kinematic space it translates into giving a small negative imaginary part to all the energies, making the wavefunction coefficients well-defined for any value of their real part along the real axis. Unitarity is instead encoded into a non-convex part of the cosmological polytope, which we name \textit{optical polytope}. The cosmological optical theorem emerges as the equivalence between a specific polytope subdivision of the optical polytope and its triangulations, each of which provides different cutting rules. The flat-space optical theorem instead emerges from the non-convexity of the optical polytope. On the more mathematical side, we provide two definitions of this non-convex geometry, none of them based on the idea of the non-convex geometry as a union of convex ones