Preheating after Small-Field Inflation
Philippe Brax, Jean-Francois Dufaux, Sophie Mariadassou

TL;DR
This paper analyzes preheating in small-field inflation models, revealing a tachyonic instability-driven process that can be highly efficient, produce distinctive fluctuation spectra, and potentially generate observable primordial black holes and gravitational waves.
Contribution
It provides an analytical description of tachyonic preheating in small-field inflation, highlighting its efficiency, unique fluctuation spectrum, and potential observational signatures.
Findings
Preheating can complete in less than one oscillation.
The fluctuation spectrum may peak around the Hubble scale.
Preheating can produce primordial black holes and gravitational waves detectable today.
Abstract
Whereas preheating after chaotic and hybrid inflation models has been abundantly studied in the literature, preheating in small field inflation models, where the curvature of the inflaton potential is negative during inflation, remains less explored. In these models, a tachyonic instability at the end of inflation leads to a succession of exponentially large increases and \emph{decreases} of the inflaton fluctuations as the inflaton condensate oscillates around the minimum of its potential. The net effect is a competition between low-momentum modes which grow and decrease significantly, and modes with higher momenta which grow less but also decrease less. We develop an analytical description of this process, which is analogous to the quantum mechanical problem of tunneling through a volcano-shaped potential. Depending on the parameters, preheating may be so efficient that it completes…
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