2012
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2012/10/046
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A statistical approach to multifield inflation: many-field perturbations beyond slow roll

Abstract: We study multifield contributions to the scalar power spectrum in an ensemble of six-field inflationary models obtained in string theory. We identify examples in which inflation occurs by chance, near an approximate inflection point, and we compute the primordial perturbations numerically, both exactly and using an array of truncated models. The scalar mass spectrum and the number of fluctuating fields are accurately described by a simple random matrix model. During the approach to the inflection point, bendin… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(164 citation statements)
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References 127 publications
(301 reference statements)
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“…This suggests that the basic phenomenology is again that of inflection point inflation, and a number of numerical investigations [240,255,535,642,643] have confirmed this expectation.…”
Section: D Perspectivementioning
confidence: 83%
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“…This suggests that the basic phenomenology is again that of inflection point inflation, and a number of numerical investigations [240,255,535,642,643] have confirmed this expectation.…”
Section: D Perspectivementioning
confidence: 83%
“…26 Then, as explained in Appendix C, the fluctuations of fields transverse to the inflationary trajectory make strictly positive contributions to ∆ 2 R : see (C.107). As such, the contributions of additional fields actually strengthen the Lyth bound, increasing the displacement ∆φ required to produce a given observed value of r. The bound can be (rather weakly) violated if the slow-roll, slow-turn approximations assumed above are invalid: fluctuations of additional fields can then contribute negatively to ∆ 2 R , increasing the effective value of r -see [255] for explicit examples. However, we are not aware of a plausible construction in which this effect is large enough to induce a meaningful weakening of the bound (2.106).…”
Section: Evading the Lyth Bound?mentioning
confidence: 97%
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