Inflationary magnetogenesis in the perturbative regime
Massimo Giovannini

TL;DR
This paper explores how smooth evolution of gauge couplings during inflation can generate large-scale magnetic fields, with a focus on the hypermagnetic spectrum and its implications for cosmic magnetogenesis.
Contribution
It introduces a model with continuous gauge coupling evolution, classifies gauge spectra via duality symmetry, and analyzes the resulting magnetic field strengths and spectra.
Findings
A slightly blue hyperelectric spectrum can produce a quasi-flat hypermagnetic spectrum.
Large-scale magnetic fields of a few hundredths of a nG are possible.
The scenario remains perturbative while generating cosmologically relevant magnetic fields.
Abstract
While during inflation a phase of increasing gauge coupling allows for a scale-invariant hyperelectric spectrum, when the coupling decreases a flat hypermagnetic spectrum can be generated for typical wavelengths larger than the effective horizon. After the gauge coupling flattens out the late-time hypermagnetic power spectra outside the horizon in the radiation epoch are determined by the hyperelectric fields at the end of inflation whereas the opposite is true in the case of decreasing coupling. Instead of imposing an abrupt freeze after inflation, we consider a smooth evolution of the mode functions by positing that the gauge couplings and their conformal time derivatives are always continuous together with the background extrinsic curvature. The amplified gauge power spectra are classified according to their transformation properties under the duality symmetry. After clarifying the…
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