4.6 Article

Black hole formation from a general quadratic action for inflationary primordial fluctuations

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2019/06/016

Keywords

inflation; primordial black holes

Funding

  1. Contrato de Atraccion de Talento (Modalidad 1) de la Comunidad de Madrid (Spain) [2017-T1/TIC-5520]
  2. MINECO (Spain) [FPA2016-78022-P]
  3. Atraccion del Talento Cientifico en Salamanca programme
  4. MINECO's projects [FIS2014-52837-P, FIS2016-78859-P]
  5. EU's Horizon 2020 through the InterTalentum programme [713366]
  6. Spanish MINECO's Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa Program [SEV-2012-0249, SEV-2016-0597]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The most up to date femto- and micro-lensing constraints indicate that primordial black holes of similar to 10(-16)M(circle dot) and similar to 10(-12) M-circle dot, respectively, may constitute a large fraction of the dark matter. We describe analytically and numerically the dynamics by which inflationary fluctuations featuring a time-varying propagation speed or an effective Planck mass can lead to abundant primordial black hole production. As an example, we provide an ad hoc DBI-like model. A very large primordial spectrum originating from a small speed of sound typically leads to strong coupling within the vanilla effective theory of inflationary perturbations. However, we point out that ghost inflation may be able to circumvent this problem. We consider as well black hole formation in solid inflation, for which, in addition to an analogous difficulty, we stress the importance of the reheating process. In addition, we review the basic formalism for the collapse of large radiation density fluctuations, emphasizing the relevance of an adequate choice of gauge invariant variables.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available