Recognition: unknown
Scalaron from R²-gravity as a Heavy Field
read the original abstract
We study a model of inflation in which a scalar field $\chi$ is non-minimally coupled to Starobinsky's $R^2$ gravity. After transforming it to the Einstein frame, a new scalar field, the scalaron $\phi$, will appear and couple to $\chi$ with a nontrivial field metric, while $\chi$ acquires a positive mass via the non-minimal coupling. Initially inflation occurs along the $\phi$ direction with $\chi$ trapped near its origin by this induced mass. After $\phi$ crosses a critical value, it starts rolling down rapidly and proceeds todamped oscillations around an effective local minimum determined by the value of $\chi$, while inflation still continues, driven by the $\chi$ field at this second stage where the effect of the non-minimal coupling becomes negligible. The presence of the damped oscillations during the transition from the first to second stage of inflation causes enhancement and oscillation features in the power spectrum of the curvature perturbation. Assuming that the oscillations may be treated perturbatively, we calculate these features by using the $\delta N$ formalism, and discuss its observational implications to large scale CMB anomalies or primordial black hole formation, depending on the scale of the features.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Probing non-Gaussianity during reheating with SIGW in the LISA band
Non-standard reheating imprints detectable features on SIGW spectra via non-Gaussianity, with dynamics that can suppress or boost the signal amplitude for LISA.
-
Review of strongly coupled regimes in gravity with Dyson-Schwinger approach
Dyson-Schwinger methods applied to gravity theories produce conformally flat metrics and a sequence of cosmological phase transitions from conformal symmetry breaking that non-minimal scalar couplings can suppress.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.