Primordial Black Holes from a tiny bump/dip in the Inflaton potential
Swagat S. Mishra, Varun Sahni

TL;DR
Tiny features like bumps or dips in the inflaton potential during inflation can significantly amplify scalar perturbations, leading to primordial black hole formation across a wide mass range without disrupting CMB observables.
Contribution
This work demonstrates that small localized features in the inflaton potential can produce substantial primordial black holes while preserving standard inflationary predictions.
Findings
Amplification of scalar power spectrum up to 10^7.
Formation of primordial black holes across 10^-17 to 100 solar masses.
Models compatible with string theory and alpha-attractors.
Abstract
Scalar perturbations during inflation can be substantially amplified by tiny features in the inflaton potential. A bump-like feature behaves like a local speed-breaker and lowers the speed of the scalar field, thereby locally enhancing the scalar power spectrum. A bump-like feature emerges naturally if the base inflaton potential contains a local correction term such as at . The presence of such a localised correction term at leads to a large peak in the curvature power spectrum and to an enhanced probability of black hole formation. Remarkably this does not significantly affect the scalar spectral index and tensor to scalar ratio on CMB scales. Consequently such models can produce higher mass primordial black holes () in contrast to models with `near inflection-point…
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