26 research outputs found
Squeezed tensor non-Gaussianity in non-attractor inflation
We investigate primordial tensor non-Gaussianity in single field inflation,
during a phase of non-attractor evolution when the spectrum of primordial
tensor modes can be enhanced to a level detectable at interferometer scales.
Making use of a tensor duality we introduced in arXiv:1808.10475, we
analytically compute the full bispectrum of primordial tensor fluctuations
during the non-attractor era. During this epoch the shape of the tensor
bispectrum is enhanced in the squeezed limit, its amplitude can be amplified
with respect to slow-roll models, and tensor non-Gaussianity can exhibit a
scale dependence distinctive of our set-up. We prove that our results do not
depend on the frame used for the calculations. Squeezed tensor non-Gaussianity
induces a characteristic quadrupolar anisotropy on the power spectrum of the
stochastic background of primordial tensor perturbations. As a step to make
contact with gravitational wave experiments, we discuss the response function
of a ground based Michelson interferometer to a gravitational wave background
with such a feature.Comment: 34 pages, 4 figure
Infrared effects in inflationary correlation functions
In this article, I briefly review the status of infrared effects which occur
when using inflationary models to calculate initial conditions for a subsequent
hot, dense plasma phase. Three types of divergence have been identified in the
literature: secular, "time-dependent" logarithms, which grow with time spent
outside the horizon; "box-cutoff" logarithms, which encode a dependence on the
infrared cutoff when calculating in a finite-sized box; and "quantum"
logarithms, which depend on the ratio of a scale characterizing new physics to
the scale of whatever process is under consideration, and whose interpretation
is the same as conventional field theory. I review the calculations in which
these divergences appear, and discuss the methods which have been developed to
deal with them.Comment: Invited review for focus section of Classical & Quantum Gravity on
nonlinear and nongaussian perturbation theory. Some improvements compared to
version which will appear in CQG, especially in Sec. 2.3. 30 pages +
references
Loop Corrections to Cosmological Perturbations in Multi-field Inflationary Models
We investigate one-loop quantum corrections to the power spectrum of
adiabatic perturbation from entropy modes/adiabatic mode cross-interactions in
multiple DBI inflationary models. We find that due to the non-canonical kinetic
term in DBI models, the loop corrections are enhanced by slow-varying parameter
and small sound speed . Thus, in general the loop-corrections
in multi-DBI models can be large. Moreover, we find that the loop-corrections
from adiabatic/entropy cross-interaction vertices are IR finite.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures; v2, typos corrected, ref added; v3 typos
corrected, version for publishing in jca
EFT beyond the horizon: stochastic inflation and how primordial quantum fluctuations go classical
We identify the effective theory describing inflationary super-Hubble scales and show it to be a special case of effective field theories appropriate to open systems. Open systems allow information to be exchanged between the degrees of freedom of interest and those that are integrated out, such as for particles moving through a fluid. Strictly speaking they cannot in general be described by an effective lagrangian; rather the appropriate `low-energy' limit is instead a Lindblad equation describing the evolution of the density matrix of the slow degrees of freedom. We derive the equation relevant to super-Hubble modes of quantum fields in near-de Sitter spacetimes and derive two implications. We show the evolution of the diagonal density-matrix elements quickly approaches the Fokker-Planck equation of Starobinsky's stochastic inflationary picture. This provides an alternative first-principles derivation of this picture's stochastic noise and drift, as well as its leading corrections. (An application computes the noise for systems with a sub-luminal sound speed.) We argue that the presence of interactions drives the off-diagonal density-matrix elements to zero in the field basis. This shows why the field basis is the `pointer basis' for the decoherence of primordial quantum fluctuations while they are outside the horizon, thus allowing them to re-enter as classical fluctuations, as assumed when analyzing CMB data. The decoherence process is efficient, occurring after several Hubble times even for interactions as weak as gravitational-strength. Crucially, the details of the interactions largely control only the decoherence time and not the nature of the final late-time stochastic state, much as interactions can control the equilibration time for thermal systems but are largely irrelevant to the properties of the resulting equilibrium state