English

The Giant Inflaton

High Energy Physics - Theory 2009-11-10 v2

Abstract

We investigate a new mechanism for realizing slow roll inflation in string theory, based on the dynamics of p anti-D3 branes in a class of mildly warped flux compactifications. Attracted to the bottom of a warped conifold throat, the anti-branes then cluster due to a novel mechanism wherein the background flux polarizes in an attempt to screen them. Once they are sufficiently close, the M units of flux cause the anti-branes to expand into a fuzzy NS5-brane, which for rather generic choices of p/M will unwrap around the geometry, decaying into D3-branes via a classical process. We find that the effective potential governing this evolution possesses several epochs that can potentially support slow-roll inflation, provided the process can be arranged to take place at a high enough energy scale, of about one or two orders of magnitude below the Planck energy; this scale, however, lies just outside the bounds of our approximations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.hep-th/0403123,
  title  = {The Giant Inflaton},
  author = {Oliver DeWolfe and Shamit Kachru and Herman Verlinde},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:hep-th/0403123},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

31 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX. v2: references added, typos fixed