92 research outputs found
Resolving the Inflationary Power Spectrum
Recently there have been differing viewpoints on how to evaluate the
curvature power spectrum generated during inflation. In a series of papers by
some authors it has been argued that the renormalization scheme adopted for the
inflaton field phi(x) to make finite should also be applied to
|phi_k|^2. But this then modifies the curvature power spectrum in a non-trivial
way. On the other hand, others have criticized this approach and suggested
alternatives, which have been further countered by the original authors. We
discuss these differing viewpoints and indicate inconsistencies in both
approaches. We then resolve the issue by showing why the standard expression,
without any non-trivial regularization, is still valid.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of The 10th International Symposium on
Cosmology and Particle Astrophysics (CosPA2013
Current Status of Warm Inflation
Warm inflation is an inflationary scenario in which a thermal bath coexists
with the inflaton during inflation. This is unlike standard cold inflation in
which the Universe is effectively devoid of particles during inflation. The
thermal bath in warm inflation is maintained by the dissipation of the
inflaton's energy through its couplings to other fields. Many models of warm
inflation have been proposed and their predictions have been compared with
cosmological data. Certain models of inflation that are disallowed in the
context of cold inflation by the data are allowed in the warm inflationary
scenario, and vice versa.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures; Slightly longer version of a brief review talk at
the 18th Lomonosov Conference on Elementary Particle Physics at Moscow State
University, August 24-30, 201
Studying Electroweak Baryogenesis using Evenisation and the Wigner Formalism
We derive the kinetic equation for fermions and antifermions interacting with
a planar Higgs bubble wall during the electroweak phase transition using the
`evenisation' procedure and the Wigner formalism for a Lagrangian with the
phase of the complex fermion mass rotated away. We obtain the energy, velocity
and force for the particles in the presence of the Higgs bubble wall. Our
results using both methods are in agreement. This indicates the robustness of
evenisation as a method to study quantum corrections to the velocity and force
for particles in the Higgs wall during the electroweak phase transition. We
also derive the transport equations from the zeroth and first moment of the
kinetic equation.Comment: no figures (Error in indentification of antiparticle states
corrected.
Gravitino production in an inflationary Universe and implications for leptogenesis
Models of leptogenesis are constrained by the low reheat temperature at the
end of reheating associated with the gravitino bound. However a detailed view
of reheating, in which the maximum temperature during reheating, \Tmax, can
be orders of magnitude higher than the reheat temperature, allows for the
production of heavy Majorana neutrinos needed for leptogenesis. But then one
must also consider the possibility of enhanced gravitino production in such
scenarios. In this article we consider gravitino production during reheating,
its dependence on \Tmax, and its relevance for leptogenesis. Earlier
analytical studies of the gravitino abundance have only considered gravitino
production in the post-reheating radiation dominated era. We find that the
gravitino abundance generated during reheating is comparable to that generated
after reheating. This lowers the upper bound on the reheat temperature by a
factor of 4/3.Comment: Journal version, minor change in title, 13 pages (revtex), 2 eps
figure
The Angular Dependence of the Three-Point Correlation Function of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation as Predicted by Inflationary Cosmologies
Inflationary models predict a definite, model independent, angular dependence
for the three-point correlation function of at large angles
(greater than ) which we calculate. The overall amplitude is
model dependent and generically unobservably small, but may be large in some
specific models. We compare our results with other models of nongaussian
fluctuations.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures (described but not included, available on
request), in Plain Tex, UCSBTH-92-3
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