Disformal Inflation
read the original abstract
We show how short inflation naturally arises in a non-minimal gravity theory with a scalar field without any potential terms. This field drives inflation solely by its derivatives, which couple to the matter only through the combination $\bar g_{\mu\nu} = g_{\mu\nu} - \frac{1}{m^4} \partial_\mu \phi \partial_\nu \phi$. The theory is free of instabilities around the usual Minkowski vacuum. Inflation lasts as long as $\dot \phi^2 > m^4$, and terminates gracefully once the scalar field kinetic energy drops below $m^4$. The total number of e-folds is given by the initial inflaton energy $\dot \phi_0^2$ as ${\cal N} \simeq \frac13 \ln(\frac{\dot \phi_0}{m^2})$. The field $\phi$ can neither efficiently reheat the universe nor produce the primordial density fluctuations. However this could be remedied by invoking the curvaton mechanism. If inflation starts when $\dot \phi^2_0 \sim M^4_P$, and $m \sim m_{EW} \sim TeV$, the number of e-folds is ${\cal N} \sim 25$. Because the scale of inflation is low, this is sufficient to solve the horizon problem if the reheating temperature is $T_{RH} \ga MeV$. In this instance, the leading order coupling of $\phi$ to matter via a dimension-8 operator $\frac{1}{m^4}\partial_\mu \phi \partial_\nu \phi ~ T^{\mu\nu}$ would lead to fermion-antifermion annihilation channels $f\bar f \to \phi \phi$ accessible to the LHC, while yielding very weak corrections to the Newtonian potential and to supernova cooling rates, that are completely within experimental limits.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.