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Stochastic axionlike curvaton: Non-Gaussianity and primordial black holes without a large power spectrum

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Stochastic axionlike curvaton: Non-Gaussianity and primordial black holes without a large power spectrum. / Chen, Chao; Ghoshal, Anish; Tasinato, Gianmassimo et al.
In: Physical Review D, Vol. 111, No. 6, 063539, 19.03.2025.

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Chen C, Ghoshal A, Tasinato G, Tomberg E. Stochastic axionlike curvaton: Non-Gaussianity and primordial black holes without a large power spectrum. Physical Review D. 2025 Mar 19;111(6):063539. doi: 10.1103/physrevd.111.063539

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Chen, Chao ; Ghoshal, Anish ; Tasinato, Gianmassimo et al. / Stochastic axionlike curvaton : Non-Gaussianity and primordial black holes without a large power spectrum. In: Physical Review D. 2025 ; Vol. 111, No. 6.

Bibtex

@article{03a08af94cb640da9693b38dbc8fbf94,
title = "Stochastic axionlike curvaton: Non-Gaussianity and primordial black holes without a large power spectrum",
abstract = "We discuss a mechanism of primordial black hole (PBH) formation that does not require specific features in the inflationary potential, revisiting previous literature. In this mechanism, a light spectator field evolves stochastically during inflation and remains subdominant during the post-inflationary era. Even though the curvature power spectrum stays small at all scales, rare perturbations of the field probe a local maximum in its potential, leading to non-Gaussian tails in the distribution of curvature fluctuations, and to copious PBH production. For a concrete axionlike particle (ALP) scenario we analytically determine the distribution of the compaction function for perturbations, showing that it is characterized by a heavy tail, which produces an extended PBH mass distribution. We find the ALP mass and decay constant to be correlated with the PBH mass, for instance, an ALP with a mass ma=5.4×1014 eV and a decay constant fa=4.6×10−5 MPl can lead to PBHs of mass MPBH=1021 g as the entire dark matter of the universe, and is testable in future PBH observations via lensing in the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and mergers detectable in the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna and Einstein Telescope gravitational wave detectors. We then extend our analysis to mixed ALP and PBH dark matter and Higgs-like spectator fields. We find that PBHs cluster strongly over all cosmological scales, clashing with cosmic microwave background isocurvature bounds. We argue that this problem is shared by all PBH production from inflationary models that depend solely on large non-Gaussianity without a peak in the curvature power spectrum and discuss possible remedies. Published by the American Physical Society 2025",
author = "Chao Chen and Anish Ghoshal and Gianmassimo Tasinato and Eemeli Tomberg",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1103/physrevd.111.063539",
language = "English",
volume = "111",
journal = "Physical Review D",
issn = "2470-0010",
publisher = "American Physical Society",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stochastic axionlike curvaton

T2 - Non-Gaussianity and primordial black holes without a large power spectrum

AU - Chen, Chao

AU - Ghoshal, Anish

AU - Tasinato, Gianmassimo

AU - Tomberg, Eemeli

PY - 2025/3/19

Y1 - 2025/3/19

N2 - We discuss a mechanism of primordial black hole (PBH) formation that does not require specific features in the inflationary potential, revisiting previous literature. In this mechanism, a light spectator field evolves stochastically during inflation and remains subdominant during the post-inflationary era. Even though the curvature power spectrum stays small at all scales, rare perturbations of the field probe a local maximum in its potential, leading to non-Gaussian tails in the distribution of curvature fluctuations, and to copious PBH production. For a concrete axionlike particle (ALP) scenario we analytically determine the distribution of the compaction function for perturbations, showing that it is characterized by a heavy tail, which produces an extended PBH mass distribution. We find the ALP mass and decay constant to be correlated with the PBH mass, for instance, an ALP with a mass ma=5.4×1014 eV and a decay constant fa=4.6×10−5 MPl can lead to PBHs of mass MPBH=1021 g as the entire dark matter of the universe, and is testable in future PBH observations via lensing in the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and mergers detectable in the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna and Einstein Telescope gravitational wave detectors. We then extend our analysis to mixed ALP and PBH dark matter and Higgs-like spectator fields. We find that PBHs cluster strongly over all cosmological scales, clashing with cosmic microwave background isocurvature bounds. We argue that this problem is shared by all PBH production from inflationary models that depend solely on large non-Gaussianity without a peak in the curvature power spectrum and discuss possible remedies. Published by the American Physical Society 2025

AB - We discuss a mechanism of primordial black hole (PBH) formation that does not require specific features in the inflationary potential, revisiting previous literature. In this mechanism, a light spectator field evolves stochastically during inflation and remains subdominant during the post-inflationary era. Even though the curvature power spectrum stays small at all scales, rare perturbations of the field probe a local maximum in its potential, leading to non-Gaussian tails in the distribution of curvature fluctuations, and to copious PBH production. For a concrete axionlike particle (ALP) scenario we analytically determine the distribution of the compaction function for perturbations, showing that it is characterized by a heavy tail, which produces an extended PBH mass distribution. We find the ALP mass and decay constant to be correlated with the PBH mass, for instance, an ALP with a mass ma=5.4×1014 eV and a decay constant fa=4.6×10−5 MPl can lead to PBHs of mass MPBH=1021 g as the entire dark matter of the universe, and is testable in future PBH observations via lensing in the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and mergers detectable in the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna and Einstein Telescope gravitational wave detectors. We then extend our analysis to mixed ALP and PBH dark matter and Higgs-like spectator fields. We find that PBHs cluster strongly over all cosmological scales, clashing with cosmic microwave background isocurvature bounds. We argue that this problem is shared by all PBH production from inflationary models that depend solely on large non-Gaussianity without a peak in the curvature power spectrum and discuss possible remedies. Published by the American Physical Society 2025

U2 - 10.1103/physrevd.111.063539

DO - 10.1103/physrevd.111.063539

M3 - Journal article

VL - 111

JO - Physical Review D

JF - Physical Review D

SN - 2470-0010

IS - 6

M1 - 063539

ER -