Primordial black holes and local non-Gaussianity in canonical inflation

Samuel Passaglia, Wayne Hu, and Hayato Motohashi
Phys. Rev. D 99, 043536 – Published 26 February 2019

Abstract

Primordial black holes (PBHs) cannot be produced abundantly enough to be the dark matter in canonical single-field inflation under slow roll. This conclusion is robust to local non-Gaussian correlations between long- and short-wavelength curvature modes, which we show have no effect in slow roll on local primordial black hole abundances. For the prototypical model which evades this no-go, ultra-slow roll (USR), these squeezed non-Gaussian correlations have at most an order-unity effect on the variance of PBH-producing curvature fluctuations for models that would otherwise fail to form sufficient PBHs. Moreover, the transition out of USR, which is necessary for a successful model, suppresses even this small enhancement unless it causes a large increase in the inflaton kinetic energy in a fraction of an e-fold, which we call a large and fast transition. Along the way we apply the in-in formalism, the δN formalism, and gauge transformations to compute non-Gaussianities and illuminate different aspects of the physical origin of these results. Local non-Gaussianity in the squeezed limit does not weaken the Gaussian conclusion that PBHs as dark matter in canonical single-field inflation require a complicated and fine-tuned potential shape with an epoch where slow roll is transiently violated.

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  • Received 2 January 2019

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.99.043536

© 2019 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Research Areas
Gravitation, Cosmology & Astrophysics

Authors & Affiliations

Samuel Passaglia1,*, Wayne Hu1, and Hayato Motohashi2

  • 1Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics, Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Enrico Fermi Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA
  • 2Center for Gravitational Physics, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan

  • *passaglia@uchicago.edu

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Issue

Vol. 99, Iss. 4 — 15 February 2019

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