1,449 research outputs found
Gravity and non-gravity mediated couplings in multiple-field inflation
Mechanisms for the generation of primordial non-Gaussian metric fluctuations
in the context of multiple-field inflation are reviewed. As long as kinetic
terms remain canonical, it appears that nonlinear couplings inducing
non-gaussianities can be split into two types. The extension of the one-field
results to multiple degrees of freedom leads to gravity mediated couplings that
are ubiquitous but generally modest. Multiple-field inflation offers however
the possibility of generating non-gravity mediated coupling in isocurvature
directions that can eventually induce large non-Gaussianities in the metric
fluctuations. The robustness of the predictions of such models is eventually
examined in view of a case study derived from a high-energy physics
construction.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, invited review for CQG issue on non-linear
cosmolog
Inhomogeneous non-Gaussianity
We propose a method to probe higher-order correlators of the primordial
density field through the inhomogeneity of local non-Gaussian parameters, such
as f_NL, measured within smaller patches of the sky. Correlators between
n-point functions measured in one patch of the sky and k-point functions
measured in another patch depend upon the (n+k)-point functions over the entire
sky. The inhomogeneity of non-Gaussian parameters may be a feasible way to
detect or constrain higher-order correlators in local models of
non-Gaussianity, as well as to distinguish between single and multiple-source
scenarios for generating the primordial density perturbation, and more
generally to probe the details of inflationary physics.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures; v2: Minor changes and references added. Matches
the published versio
An Application of Feynman-Kleinert Approximants to the Massive Schwinger Model on a Lattice
A trial application of the method of Feynman-Kleinert approximants is made to
perturbation series arising in connection with the lattice Schwinger model. In
extrapolating the lattice strong-coupling series to the weak-coupling continuum
limit, the approximants do not converge well. In interpolating between the
continuum perturbation series at large fermion mass and small fermion mass,
however, the approximants do give good results. In the course of the
calculations, we picked up and rectified an error in an earlier derivation of
the continuum series coefficients.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 5 table
Deep recurrent networks predicting the gap evolution in adiabatic quantum computing
One of the main challenges in quantum physics is predicting efficiently the dynamics of observables in many-body problems out of equilibrium. A particular example occurs in adiabatic quantum computing, where finding the structure of the instantaneous gap of the Hamiltonian is crucial in order to optimize the speed of the computation. Inspired by this challenge, in this work we explore the potential of deep learning for discovering a mapping from the parameters that fully identify a problem Hamiltonian to the full evolution of the gap during an adiabatic sweep applying different network architectures. Through this example, we find that a limiting factor for the learnability of the dynamics is the size of the input, that is, how the number of parameters needed to identify the Hamiltonian scales with the system size. We demonstrate that a long short-term memory network succeeds in predicting the gap when the parameter space scales linearly with system size. Remarkably, we show that once this architecture is combined with a convolutional neural network to deal with the spatial structure of the model, the gap evolution can even be predicted for system sizes larger than the ones seen by the neural network during training. This provides a significant speedup in comparison with the existing exact and approximate algorithms in calculating the gap
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
Generation of helical magnetic fields from inflation
The generation of helical magnetic fields during single field inflation due
to an axial coupling of the electromagnetic field to the inflaton is discussed.
We find that such a coupling always leads to a blue spectrum of magnetic fields
during slow roll inflation. Though the helical magnetic fields further evolve
during the inverse cascade in the radiation era after inflation, we conclude
that the magnetic fields generated by such an axial coupling can not lead to
observed field strength on cosmologically relevant scales.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; Contribution to the proceedings of the
International Conference on Gravitation and Cosmology (ICGC), Goa, India,
December, 201
Large non-Gaussianity from two-component hybrid inflation
We study the generation of non-Gaussianity in models of hybrid inflation with
two inflaton fields, (2-brid inflation). We analyse the region in the parameter
and the initial condition space where a large non-Gaussianity may be generated
during slow-roll inflation which is generally characterised by a large f_NL,
tau_NL and a small g_NL. For certain parameter values we can satisfy
tau_NL>>f_NL^2. The bispectrum is of the local type but may have a significant
scale dependence. We show that the loop corrections to the power spectrum and
bispectrum are suppressed during inflation, if one assume that the fields
follow a classical background trajectory. We also include the effect of the
waterfall field, which can lead to a significant change in the observables
after the waterfall field is destabilised, depending on the couplings between
the waterfall and inflaton fields.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures; v2: comments and references added, typos
corrected, matches published versio
The Trispectrum in the Multi-brid Inflation
The trispectrum is at least as important as the bispectrum and its size can
be characterized by two parameters and . In this short
paper, we focus on the Multi-brid inflation, in particular the two-brid
inflation model in arXiv.0805.0974, and find that is always
positive and roughly equals to for the low scale
inflation, but can be negative or positive and its order of magnitude
can be the same as that of or even largerComment: 12 pages; minor correction, refs added; further refs added, version
for publication in JCA
Trispectrum from Ghost Inflation
Ghost inflation predicts almost scale-invariant primordial cosmological
perturbations with relatively large non-Gaussianity. The bispectrum is known to
have a large contribution at the wavenumbers forming an equilateral triangle
and the corresponding nonlinear parameter is typically of
order . In this paper we calculate trispectrum from ghost inflation
and show that the corresponding nonlinear parameter is typically of
order . We investigate the shape dependence of the trispectrum and see
that it has some features different from DBI inflation. Therefore, our result
may be useful as a template to distinguish ghost inflation from other models of
inflation by future experiments.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figure
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
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