117 research outputs found
The shape of high order correlation functions in CMB anisotropy maps
We present a phenomenological investigation of non-Gaussian effects that
could be seen on CMB temperature maps. Explicit expressions for the temperature
correlation functions are given for different types of primordial mode
couplings. We argue that a simplified description of the radial transfer
function for the temperature anisotropies allows to get insights into the
general properties of the bi and tri-spectra. The accuracy of these results is
explored together with the use of the small scale approximation to get explicit
expressions of high order spectra. The bi-spectrum is found to have alternate
signs for the successive acoustic peaks. Sign patterns for the trispectra are
more complicated and depend specifically on the type of metric couplings. Local
primordial couplings are found to give patterns that are different from those
expected from weak lensing effects.Comment: 31 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Dominance of gauge artifact in the consistency relation for the primordial bispectrum
The conventional cosmological perturbation theory has been performed under
the assumption that we know the whole spatial region of the universe with
infinite volume. This is, however, not the case in the actual observations
because observable portion of the universe is limited. To give a theoretical
prediction to the observable fluctuations, gauge-invariant observables should
be composed of the information in our local observable universe with finite
volume. From this point of view, we reexamine the primordial non-Gaussianity in
single field models, focusing on the bispectrum in the squeezed limit. A
conventional prediction states that the bispectrum in this limit is related to
the power spectrum through the so-called consistency relation. However, it
turns out that, if we adopt a genuine gauge invariant variable which is
naturally composed purely of the information in our local universe, the leading
term for the bispectrum in the squeezed limit predicted by the consistency
relation vanishes.Comment: 12 pages; v2: accepted version in JCA
Constraints on mode couplings and modulation of the CMB with WMAP data
We investigate a possible asymmetry in the statistical properties of the
cosmic microwave background temperature field and to do so we construct an
estimator aiming at detecting a dipolar modulation. Such a modulation is found
to induce correlations between multipoles with . Applying this
estimator, to the V and W bands of the WMAP data, we found a significant
detection in the V band. We argue however that foregrounds and in particular
point sources are the origin of this signal.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
The Fermion Self-Energy during Inflation
We compute the one loop fermion self-energy for massless Dirac + Einstein in
the presence of a locally de Sitter background. We employ dimensional
regularization and obtain a fully renormalized result by absorbing all
divergences with BPHZ counterterms. An interesting technical aspect of this
computation is the need for a noninvariant counterterm owing to the breaking of
de Sitter invariance by our gauge condition. Our result can be used in the
quantum-corrected Dirac equation to search for inflation-enhanced quantum
effects from gravitons, analogous to those which have been found for massless,
minimally coupled scalars.Comment: 63 pages, 3 figures (uses axodraw.sty), LaTeX 2epsilon. Revised
version (to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity) corrects some typoes and
contains some new reference
Classical approximation to quantum cosmological correlations
We investigate up to which order quantum effects can be neglected in
calculating cosmological correlation functions after horizon exit. As a toy
model, we study theory on a de Sitter background for a massless
minimally coupled scalar field . We find that for tree level and one loop
contributions in the quantum theory, a good classical approximation can be
constructed, but for higher loop corrections this is in general not expected to
be possible. The reason is that loop corrections get non-negligible
contributions from loop momenta with magnitude up to the Hubble scale H, at
which scale classical physics is not expected to be a good approximation to the
quantum theory. An explicit calculation of the one loop correction to the two
point function, supports the argument that contributions from loop momenta of
scale are not negligible. Generalization of the arguments for the toy model
to derivative interactions and the curvature perturbation leads to the
conclusion that the leading orders of non-Gaussian effects generated after
horizon exit, can be approximated quite well by classical methods. Furthermore
we compare with a theorem by Weinberg. We find that growing loop corrections
after horizon exit are not excluded, even in single field inflation.Comment: 44 pages, 1 figure; v2: corrected errors, added references,
conclusions unchanged; v3: added section in which we compare with stochastic
approach; this version matches published versio
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
A new diagrammatic representation for correlation functions in the in-in formalism
In this paper we provide an alternative method to compute correlation
functions in the in-in formalism, with a modified set of Feynman rules to
compute loop corrections. The diagrammatic expansion is based on an iterative
solution of the equation of motion for the quantum operators with only retarded
propagators, which makes each diagram intrinsically local (whereas in the
standard case locality is the result of several cancellations) and endowed with
a straightforward physical interpretation. While the final result is strictly
equivalent, as a bonus the formulation presented here also contains less graphs
than other diagrammatic approaches to in-in correlation functions. Our method
is particularly suitable for applications to cosmology.Comment: 14 pages, matches the published version. includes a modified version
of axodraw.sty that works with the Revtex4 clas
One-loop corrections to the curvature perturbation from inflation
An estimate of the one-loop correction to the power spectrum of the
primordial curvature perturbation is given, assuming it is generated during a
phase of single-field, slow-roll inflation. The loop correction splits into two
parts, which can be calculated separately: a purely quantum-mechanical
contribution which is generated from the interference among quantized field
modes around the time when they cross the horizon, and a classical contribution
which comes from integrating the effect of field modes which have already
passed far beyond the horizon. The loop correction contains logarithms which
may invalidate the use of naive perturbation theory for cosmic microwave
background (CMB) predictions when the scale associated with the CMB is
exponentially different from the scale at which the fundamental theory which
governs inflation is formulated.Comment: 28 pages, uses feynmp.sty and ioplatex journal style. v2: supersedes
version published in JCAP. Some corrections and refinements to the discussion
and conclusions. v3: Corrects misidentification of quantum correction with an
IR effect. Improvements to the discussio
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
A graviton propagator for inflation
We construct the scalar and graviton propagator in quasi de Sitter space up
to first order in the slow roll parameter . After
a rescaling, the propagators are similar to those in de Sitter space with an
correction to the effective mass. The limit
corresponds to the E(3) vacuum that breaks de Sitter symmetry, but does not
break spatial isotropy and homogeneity. The new propagators allow for a
self-consistent, dynamical study of quantum back-reaction effects during
inflation.Comment: 23 page
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