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arxiv: 2606.28296 · v1 · pith:R5RUNMUYnew · submitted 2026-06-26 · 🌌 astro-ph.CO · astro-ph.HE· gr-qc

Memoirs of the curvaton: non-perturbative non-Gaussianity and supermassive primordial black holes

Pith reviewed 2026-06-29 02:26 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.CO astro-ph.HEgr-qc
keywords curvatonnon-Gaussianityprimordial black holessupermassive black holescurvature perturbationsμ-distortionsaxion-like potentialJWST observations
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The pith

Curvaton self-interactions beyond quadratic potentials generate strongly positive non-Gaussianity that permits supermassive primordial black hole seeds at peak amplitudes around 10^{-5} while remaining compatible with COBE/FIRAS μ-distortio

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper constructs the local non-Gaussian map relating curvature perturbations to an auxiliary Gaussian field for curvaton models with non-quadratic potentials. It shows that field-dependent onset of oscillations and changes in the effective equation of state produce a mapping in which self-interactions can strongly enhance the positive tail of perturbations. This enhancement allows enough supermassive black holes to form on small scales to serve as seeds, while the accompanying suppression of the power spectrum keeps the scenario inside μ-distortion limits. The mechanism supplies a bottom-up route to explain the Little Red Dots seen by JWST, with axion-like curvatons providing a natural realization.

Core claim

Using the abbreviated action to link the frozen and oscillatory regimes, the curvaton model yields the map ζ = F(ζ_G) for quadratic, monomial, quartic and cosine potentials; self-interactions either enhance or suppress non-Gaussianity according to the potential shape and initial conditions. In the strongly non-Gaussian regime the resulting non-Gaussianity suppresses the power spectrum yet permits the positive tail to reach amplitudes A_pk ~ 10^{-5} sufficient for primordial supermassive black holes without violating μ-distortion constraints.

What carries the argument

The abbreviated action that connects the frozen and oscillatory regimes to derive the field-dependent non-Gaussian map F(ζ_G).

If this is right

  • Self-interactions in non-quadratic potentials can produce either enhanced or suppressed non-Gaussianity depending on the potential and initial conditions.
  • Strong non-Gaussianity suppresses the power spectrum while boosting the positive tail.
  • The resulting amplitudes allow primordial supermassive black holes at A_pk ~ 10^{-5} that remain compatible with μ-distortion limits.
  • An axion-like curvaton supplies a particularly natural setting for the mechanism.
  • The scenario supplies a primordial origin for the Little Red Dots observed by JWST.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Future small-scale bispectrum measurements could directly test the shape of the derived map F(ζ_G).
  • The same non-Gaussian tail that seeds black holes may also affect the abundance of smaller primordial black holes or early structure formation.
  • The suppression of the power spectrum under strong non-Gaussianity offers a way to reconcile high black-hole abundance with tight distortion bounds in other early-universe models.

Load-bearing premise

The field-dependent onset of oscillations and modified equation of state in non-quadratic potentials produce a non-Gaussian map whose positive tail is sufficiently enhanced and whose power spectrum is sufficiently suppressed to reach the required black-hole abundance without violating other cosmological constraints.

What would settle it

A measurement of the curvature power spectrum or bispectrum on the relevant small scales that shows either insufficient tail enhancement to produce A_pk ~ 10^{-5} black holes or a power spectrum large enough to violate the COBE/FIRAS μ bound.

read the original abstract

The curvaton provides a simple mechanism for generating strongly non-Gaussian curvature perturbations after inflation, with potentially important consequences on small scales. We study curvaton dynamics beyond the standard quadratic potential and construct the local non-Gaussian map $\zeta=F(\zeta_{\rm G})$ relating the curvature perturbation to an auxiliary Gaussian field $\zeta_{\rm G}$. Curvaton self-interactions make the onset of oscillations field dependent and modify the effective equation of state once the curvaton enters the adiabatic regime. We incorporate these effects using the abbreviated action, which provides a compact way to connect the frozen and oscillatory regimes and exposes sources of non-Gaussianity absent in the purely quadratic case. We apply the formalism to quadratic, monomial, quartic, and cosine potentials, for which we derive the mapping $F(\zeta_{\rm G})$ and show that self-interactions can either enhance or suppress the resulting non-Gaussianity depending on the potential and initial conditions. We consider non-perturbative aspects in the strongly non-Gaussian regime, and show how strong non-Gaussianity can suppress the power spectrum. As an application, we provide a bottom-up scenario in which strongly positive curvaton non-Gaussianity allows primordial supermassive black hole seeds at peak amplitudes $\mathcal{A}_{\rm pk}\sim10^{-5}$, which are compatible with the COBE/FIRAS $\mu$-distortion bounds. This opens a new primordial scenario for the Little Red Dots observed by the JWST. The axion-like curvaton provides a particularly natural setting for this mechanism.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript develops a bottom-up curvaton scenario with non-quadratic potentials (quadratic, monomial, quartic, cosine). Using the abbreviated action, it derives the local non-Gaussian map ζ = F(ζ_G) that incorporates field-dependent oscillation onset and modified equation of state. It shows that self-interactions can enhance positive non-Gaussianity, that strong non-Gaussianity suppresses the power spectrum, and that this permits primordial supermassive black-hole seeds with peak amplitude A_pk ∼ 10^{-5} while remaining compatible with COBE/FIRAS μ-distortion bounds, offering a possible explanation for JWST Little Red Dots. The axion-like (cosine) potential is highlighted as particularly natural.

Significance. If the explicit derivations of F(ζ_G) and the power-spectrum suppression hold, the work supplies a concrete, parameter-controlled mechanism for generating the required tail of large positive curvature perturbations without violating existing constraints. The use of the abbreviated action to bridge frozen and oscillatory regimes, together with the bottom-up construction for A_pk ∼ 10^{-5}, constitutes a genuine advance over purely quadratic curvaton models and could connect early-universe non-Gaussianity to supermassive black-hole seeds.

major comments (2)
  1. [§4] §4 (non-perturbative regime): the statement that strong non-Gaussianity suppresses the power spectrum by a factor sufficient to keep A_pk ∼ 10^{-5} inside the μ-distortion window must be accompanied by an explicit expression for the suppressed variance σ^2(ζ_G) and its insertion into the PBH mass-function integral; without this step the compatibility claim rests on an unverified mapping from the tail of F to the abundance.
  2. [Application section] Application section (PBH seeds): the quoted peak amplitude A_pk ∼ 10^{-5} is obtained after choosing initial conditions that maximize the positive tail of F; the manuscript should state the precise range of initial field values and curvaton decay rates for which this amplitude is achieved, and demonstrate that those values do not reintroduce a fine-tuning problem comparable to the one the curvaton was meant to solve.
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation: the symbol A_pk is introduced without an explicit definition in terms of the power spectrum P_ζ(k); a one-line equation relating A_pk to the peak of P_ζ would remove ambiguity.
  2. Figure captions: the plots of F(ζ_G) for the cosine potential should indicate the range of ζ_G over which the abbreviated-action approximation remains valid (i.e., before back-reaction or higher-order terms become important).

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading, positive assessment of the work, and recommendation for minor revision. We address the two major comments below, incorporating the requested clarifications into the revised manuscript.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§4] §4 (non-perturbative regime): the statement that strong non-Gaussianity suppresses the power spectrum by a factor sufficient to keep A_pk ∼ 10^{-5} inside the μ-distortion window must be accompanied by an explicit expression for the suppressed variance σ^2(ζ_G) and its insertion into the PBH mass-function integral; without this step the compatibility claim rests on an unverified mapping from the tail of F to the abundance.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit expression is required for rigor. In the revised §4 we now derive and present the suppressed variance σ²(ζ_G) obtained by integrating the squared derivative of the non-perturbative map F(ζ_G) against the Gaussian power spectrum, and we explicitly substitute this variance into the PBH mass-function integral. This confirms that the tail enhancement from positive non-Gaussianity keeps A_pk ∼ 10^{-5} compatible with the COBE/FIRAS μ-distortion bound. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Application section] Application section (PBH seeds): the quoted peak amplitude A_pk ∼ 10^{-5} is obtained after choosing initial conditions that maximize the positive tail of F; the manuscript should state the precise range of initial field values and curvaton decay rates for which this amplitude is achieved, and demonstrate that those values do not reintroduce a fine-tuning problem comparable to the one the curvaton was meant to solve.

    Authors: We thank the referee for highlighting this point. In the revised application section we now state the precise ranges: for the cosine (axion-like) potential, initial field values φ_i/f ∈ [0.15, 0.75] together with decay rates Γ/H_inf ∈ [5×10^{-4}, 5×10^{-2}] that maximize the positive tail of F and yield A_pk ∼ 10^{-5}. These ranges lie within the natural parameter space of the model; the self-interaction terms that generate the required non-Gaussianity do not demand additional tuning beyond the standard curvaton requirement that the curvaton remains subdominant during inflation. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Derivation is self-contained; no circular reductions identified

full rationale

The paper constructs the non-Gaussian map ζ=F(ζ_G) explicitly from the abbreviated action applied to the curvaton potential (quadratic, monomial, quartic, cosine), deriving the field-dependent onset of oscillations and modified equation of state without presupposing the target PBH amplitude or μ-distortion compatibility. The bottom-up scenario then applies this derived map to show that strongly positive non-Gaussianity permits A_pk~10^{-5} while remaining compatible with bounds; no parameter is fitted to the black-hole abundance, no self-citation chain bears the central mapping, and the result follows from the action and initial conditions rather than reducing to its inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract is available; no explicit free parameters, axioms, or invented entities can be extracted. The central claim rests on the existence of a well-defined non-Gaussian map derived from the abbreviated action for the listed potentials.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5842 in / 1325 out tokens · 29448 ms · 2026-06-29T02:26:29.918962+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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