23 research outputs found
Local non-Gaussianity from inflation
The non-Gaussian distribution of primordial perturbations has the potential
to reveal the physical processes at work in the very early Universe. Local
models provide a well-defined class of non-Gaussian distributions that arise
naturally from the non-linear evolution of density perturbations on
super-Hubble scales starting from Gaussian field fluctuations during inflation.
I describe the delta-N formalism used to calculate the primordial density
perturbation on large scales and then review several models for the origin of
local primordial non-Gaussianity, including the cuvaton, modulated reheating
and ekpyrotic scenarios. I include an appendix with a table of sign conventions
used in specific papers.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure, invited review to appear in Classical and Quantum
Gravity special issue on non-linear and non-Gaussian cosmological
perturbation
Low energy effective theory on a regularized brane in 6D gauged chiral supergravity
We derive the low energy effective theory on a brane in six-dimensional
chiral supergravity. The conical 3-brane singularities are resolved by
introducing cylindrical codimension one 4-branes whose interiors are capped by
a regular spacetime. The effective theory is described by the Brans-Dicke (BD)
theory with the BD parameter given by . The BD field is
originated from a modulus which is associated with the scaling symmetry of the
system. If the dilaton potentials on the branes preserve the scaling symmetry,
the scalar field has an exponential potential in the Einstein frame. We show
that the time dependent solutions driven by the modulus in the four-dimensional
effective theory can be lifted up to the six-dimensional exact solutions found
in the literature. Based on the effective theory, we discuss a possible way to
stabilize the modulus to recover standard cosmology and also study the
implication for the cosmological constant problem.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur
Non-Gaussianity from Symmetry
We point out that a light scalar field fluctuating around a symmetry-enhaced
point can generate large non-Gaussianity in density fluctuations. We name such
a particle as an "ungaussiton", a scalar field dominantly produced by the
quantum fluctuations,generating sizable non-Gaussianity in the density
fluctuations. We derive a consistency relation between the bispectrum and the
trispectrum, tau_NL = 10^3 f_NL^(4/3), which can be extended to arbitrary high
order correlation functions. If such a relation is confirmed by future
observations, it will strongly support this mechanism.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figure;v2 discussion and references added. To appear in
JCA
The inflationary bispectrum with curved field-space
We compute the covariant three-point function near horizon-crossing for a
system of slowly-rolling scalar fields during an inflationary epoch, allowing
for an arbitrary field-space metric. We show explicitly how to compute its
subsequent evolution using a covariantized version of the separate universe or
"delta-N" expansion, which must be augmented by terms measuring curvature of
the field-space manifold, and give the nonlinear gauge transformation to the
comoving curvature perturbation. Nonlinearities induced by the field-space
curvature terms are a new and potentially significant source of
non-Gaussianity. We show how inflationary models with non-minimal coupling to
the spacetime Ricci scalar can be accommodated within this framework. This
yields a simple toolkit allowing the bispectrum to be computed in models with
non-negligible field-space curvature.Comment: 22 pages, plus appendix and reference
Supersymmetric codimension-two branes in six-dimensional gauged supergravity
We consider the six-dimensional Salam-Sezgin supergravity in the presence of
codimension-2 branes. In the case that the branes carry only tension, we
provide a way to supersymmetrise them by adding appropriate localised
Fayet-Iliopoulos terms and localised corrections to the Chern-Simons term and
modifying accordingly the fermionic supersymmetry transformations. The
resulting brane action has N=1 supersymmetry (SUSY). We find the axisymmetric
vacua of the system and show that one has unwarped background solutions with
"football"-shaped extra dimensions which always respect N=1 SUSY for any value
of the equal brane tensions, in contrast with the non-supersymmetric brane
action background. Finally, we generically find multiple zero modes of the
gravitino in this background and discuss how one could obtain a single chiral
zero mode present in the low energy spectrum.Comment: 21 pages, no figures, A sign error in the gauge potential at the
lower brane corrected and its consequent effect discusse
Local non-Gaussianity from rapidly varying sound speeds
We study the effect of non-trivial sound speeds on local-type non-Gaussianity
during multiple-field inflation. To this end, we consider a model of
multiple-field DBI and use the deltaN formalism to track the super-horizon
evolution of perturbations. By adopting a sum separable Hubble parameter we
derive analytic expressions for the relevant quantities in the two-field case,
valid beyond slow variation. We find that non-trivial sound speeds can, in
principle, curve the trajectory in such a way that significant local-type
non-Gaussianity is produced. Deviations from slow variation, such as rapidly
varying sound speeds, enhance this effect. To illustrate our results we
consider two-field inflation in the tip regions of two warped throats and find
large local-type non-Gaussianity produced towards the end of the inflationary
process.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures; typos corrected, references added, accepted for
publication in JCA
Large non-Gaussianities in the Effective Field Theory Approach to Single-Field Inflation: the Bispectrum
The methods of effective field theory are used to study generic theories of
inflation with a single inflaton field and to perform a general analysis of the
associated non-Gaussianities. We investigate the amplitudes and shapes of the
various generic three-point correlators, the bispectra, which may be generated
by different classes of single-field inflationary models. Besides the
well-known results for the DBI-like models and the ghost inflationary theories,
we point out that curvature-related interactions may give rise to large
non-Gaussianities in the form of bispectra characterized by a flat shape which,
quite interestingly, is independently produced by several interaction terms. In
a subsequent work, we will perform a similar general analysis for the
non-Gaussianities generated by the generic four-point correlator, the
trispectrum.Comment: Version matching the one published in JCAP, 2 typos fixed, references
added. 30 pages, 20 figure
Large non-Gaussianities in the Effective Field Theory Approach to Single-Field Inflation: the Trispectrum
We perform the analysis of the trispectrum of curvature perturbations
generated by the interactions characterizing a general theory of single-field
inflation obtained by effective field theory methods. We find that
curvature-generated interaction terms, which can in general give an important
contribution to the amplitude of the four-point function, show some new
distinctive features in the form of their trispectrum shape-function. These
interesting interactions are invariant under some recently proposed symmetries
of the general theory and, as shown explicitly, do allow for a large value of
the trispectrum.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figure
Primordial fluctuations and non-Gaussianities from multifield DBI Galileon inflation
We study a cosmological scenario in which the DBI action governing the motion
of a D3-brane in a higher-dimensional spacetime is supplemented with an induced
gravity term. The latter reduces to the quartic Galileon Lagrangian when the
motion of the brane is non-relativistic and we show that it tends to violate
the null energy condition and to render cosmological fluctuations ghosts. There
nonetheless exists an interesting parameter space in which a stable phase of
quasi-exponential expansion can be achieved while the induced gravity leaves
non trivial imprints. We derive the exact second-order action governing the
dynamics of linear perturbations and we show that it can be simply understood
through a bimetric perspective. In the relativistic regime, we also calculate
the dominant contribution to the primordial bispectrum and demonstrate that
large non-Gaussianities of orthogonal shape can be generated, for the first
time in a concrete model. More generally, we find that the sign and the shape
of the bispectrum offer powerful diagnostics of the precise strength of the
induced gravity.Comment: 34 pages including 9 figures, plus appendices and bibliography.
Wordings changed and references added; matches version published in JCA
Large slow-roll corrections to the bispectrum of noncanonical inflation
Nongaussian statistics are a powerful discriminant between inflationary
models, particularly those with noncanonical kinetic terms. Focusing on
theories where the Lagrangian is an arbitrary Lorentz-invariant function of a
scalar field and its first derivatives, we review and extend the calculation of
the observable three-point function. We compute the "next-order" slow-roll
corrections to the bispectrum in closed form, and obtain quantitative estimates
of their magnitude in DBI and power-law k-inflation. In the DBI case our
results enable us to estimate corrections from the shape of the potential and
the warp factor: these can be of order several tens of percent. We track the
possible sources of large logarithms which can spoil ordinary perturbation
theory, and use them to obtain a general formula for the scale dependence of
the bispectrum. Our result satisfies the next-order version of Maldacena's
consistency condition and an equivalent consistency condition for the scale
dependence. We identify a new bispectrum shape available at next-order, which
is similar to a shape encountered in Galileon models. If fNL is sufficiently
large this shape may be independently detectable.Comment: v1: 37 pages, plus tables, figures and appendices. v2: supersedes
version published in JCAP; some clarifications and more detailed comparison
with earlier literature. All results unchanged. v3:improvements to some
plots; text unchange