An updated dark energy view of inflation
Sveva Castello, St\'ephane Ili\'c, Martin Kunz

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the current dark energy-driven acceleration could have a similar equation of state to inflation, using models constrained by recent cosmological data, and finds that deviations from w=-1 are likely undetectable with current observations.
Contribution
It introduces a class of single-field slow-roll inflation models tested against latest data to assess the detectability of deviations in the dark energy equation of state.
Findings
HSR{1} models are excluded by data.
HSR{2} models favor w>-1 but are disfavored with BICEP2/Keck data.
HSR{3} models fit best, with 1+w<0.0014 at 68% confidence.
Abstract
The present epoch of accelerated cosmic expansion is supposed to be driven by an unknown constituent called dark energy, which in the standard model takes the form of a cosmological constant, characterized by a constant equation of state w=-1. An interesting perspective over the role and nature of dark energy can be achieved by drawing a parallel with a previous epoch of accelerated expansion, inflation, which we assume to be driven by a single scalar field, the inflaton. Since the Planck satellite has constrained the value of away from 1, the inflaton cannot be identified with a pure cosmological constant, as is also suggested by the fact that inflation ended. Thus, it is interesting to verify whether a hypothetical observer would have been able to measure the deviation of the w of the inflaton from -1. To do so, we consider a class of single-field slow-roll inflationary models…
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