Extending the Cosmological Collider: New Scaling Regimes and Constraints from BOSS
Daniel Green, Jiashu Han, Benjamin Wallisch

TL;DR
This paper explores new observational signatures of primordial non-Gaussianity from inflation, focusing on oscillatory signals in large-scale structure data, and provides the first constraints on this extended parameter space using BOSS data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel class of primordial non-Gaussian signals arising from inflaton couplings, expanding the parameter space and observational prospects for cosmological collider physics.
Findings
Identified oscillatory modulations in galaxy power spectrum bias.
Analyzed sensitivity of current and future surveys to these signals.
Placed the first constraints on oscillatory non-Gaussianity using BOSS data.
Abstract
Primordial non-Gaussianity generated by additional fields during inflation offers a compelling observational target. Heavy fields imprint characteristic oscillatory signals in non-Gaussian correlation functions of the inflaton, a process sometimes referred to as cosmological-collider physics. These distinct signatures are compelling windows into ultra-high-energy physics, but are often suppressed, making standard equilateral non-Gaussianity the most promising discovery channel in many scenarios. In this paper, we show that direct couplings between the inflaton and additional fields can lead to a wide variety of novel, observationally relevant signals which open new parameter regimes that simultaneously exhibit the characteristics of light and heavy fields. We identify these primordial signatures in the late-time observables of the large-scale structure of the Universe, where they most…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
