English

Magnetogenesis and the primordial non-gaussianity

Astrophysics 2009-08-24 v2

Abstract

The primordial density fluctuation inevitably couples to all forms of matter via loop corrections and depends on the ambient conditions while inflation was ongoing. This gives us an opportunity to observe processes which were in progress while the universe was inflating, provided they were sufficiently dramatic to overcome suppression by powers of (H/MP)^2 ~ 10^(-9), where H is the Hubble scale during inflation and MP is the Planck mass. As an example, if a primordial magnetic field was synthesized during inflation, as suggested by some interpretations of the apparently universal 10^(-6) gauss field observed on galactic scales, then this could leave traces in inflationary observables. In this paper, I compute corrections to the spectrum and bispectrum generated by a varying electromagnetic coupling during inflation, assuming that the variation in this coupling is mediated by interaction with a collection of light scalar fields. If the mass scale associated with this interaction is too far below the Planck scale then the stability of perturbation theory can be upset. For the mass-scale which is relevant in the standard magnetogenesis scenario, however, the theory is stable and the model is apparently consistent with observational constraints.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0810.1617,
  title  = {Magnetogenesis and the primordial non-gaussianity},
  author = {David Seery},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.1617},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

37 pages, uses feynmp.sty and iopart.cls. v2: minor improvements in comparison with version submitted to (and accepted by) JCAP. Improves v1 with a more refined discussion of cutoffs and Lorentz invariance in Sections 4-5, but calculations are unchanged. Minor textual improvements throughout

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:28:58.234Z