Dissipative Axial Inflation
Alessio Notari, Konrad Tywoniuk

TL;DR
This paper investigates how an axial coupling between a scalar field and gauge fields can induce inflation through gauge field backreaction, leading to distinctive oscillations and potential observational signatures.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of the background evolution, demonstrating that gauge field backreaction can sustain inflation without a flat potential and identifies characteristic oscillations.
Findings
Gauge field backreaction can drive inflation without flat potentials.
Oscillations with 4-5 e-fold period imprint on perturbations.
Long inflation occurs if coupling scale is sufficiently smaller than field excursion.
Abstract
We analyze in detail the background cosmological evolution of a scalar field coupled to a massless abelian gauge field through an axial term , such as in the case of an axion. Gauge fields in this case are known to experience tachyonic growth and therefore can backreact on the background as an effective dissipation into radiation energy density , which which can lead to inflation without the need of a flat potential. We analyze the system, for momenta smaller than the cutoff , including numerically the backreaction. We consider the evolution from a given static initial condition and explicitly show that, if is smaller than the field excursion by about a factor of at least , there is a friction effect which turns on before that the field can fall down and which can then lead to a very long stage…
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