Testing for Features in the Primordial Power Spectrum
Loison Hoi, James M. Cline

TL;DR
This paper investigates the possibility of a k^3 component in the primordial power spectrum caused by inflationary physics, analyzing its observational signatures and constraints using CMB, LSS, and Lyman-alpha data.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a k^3 feature in the primordial spectrum, explores its observational implications, and provides constraints based on current cosmological data.
Findings
A k^3 component can modestly improve fit to CMB data.
Weak positive evidence for a k^3 component from galaxy and Lyman-alpha data.
Constraints on the ratio of the k^3 component to the scale-invariant spectrum.
Abstract
Well-known causality arguments show that events occurring during or at the end of inflation, associated with reheating or preheating, could contribute a blue component to the spectrum of primordial curvature perturbations, with the dependence k^3. We explore the possibility that they could be observably large in CMB, LSS, and Lyman-alpha data. We find that a k^3 component with a cutoff at some maximum k can modestly improve the fits (Delta chi^2=2.0, 5.4) of the low multipoles (l ~ 10 - 50) or the second peak (l ~ 540) of the CMB angular spectrum when the three-year WMAP data are used. Moreover, the results from WMAP are consistent with the CBI, ACBAR, 2dFGRS, and SDSS data when they are included in the analysis. Including the SDSS galaxy clustering power spectrum, we find weak positive evidence for the k^3 component at the level of Delta chi' = 2.4, with the caveat that the nonlinear…
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