In the standard picture, the inflationary universe is in a supercooled state
which ends with a short time, large scale reheating period, after which the
universe goes into a radiation dominated stage. An alternative is proposed here
in which the radiation energy density smoothly decreases all during an
inflation-like stage and with no discontinuity enters the subsequent radiation
dominated stage. The scale factor is calculated from standard Friedmann
cosmology in the presence of both radiation and vacuum energy density. A large
class of solutions confirm the above identified regime of non-reheating
inflation-like behavior for observationally consistent expansion factors and
not too large a drop in the radiation energy density. One dynamical realization
of such inflation without reheating is from warm inflation type scenarios.
However the solutions found here are properties of the Einstein equations with
generality beyond slow-roll inflation scenarios. The solutions also can be
continuously interpolated from the non-reheating type behavior to the standard
supercooled limit of exponential expansion, thus giving all intermediate
inflation-like behavior between these two extremes. The temperature of the
universe and the expansion factor are calculated for various cases.
Implications for baryongenesis are discussed. This non-reheating,
inflation-like regime also appears to have some natural features for a universe
that is between nearly flat and open.Comment: 26 pages, Latex, 2 figures, In press Physical Review