6533b855fe1ef96bd12b00a8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Primordial power spectrum features in phenomenological descriptions of inflation

Stefano GariazzoLotfi BoubekeurOlga MenaHéctor Ramírez

subject

Inflation (cosmology)PhysicsSpectral indexCosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)010308 nuclear & particles physicsEquation of state (cosmology)Cosmic microwave backgroundFOS: Physical sciencesSpectral densityAstronomy and AstrophysicsMarkov chain Monte CarloAstrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic AstrophysicsScale invariance01 natural sciencessymbols.namesakeSpace and Planetary Science0103 physical sciencessymbolsStatistical physicsPlanck010303 astronomy & astrophysicsAstrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics

description

We extend an alternative, phenomenological approach to inflation by means of an equation of state and a sound speed, both of them functions of the number of $e$-folds and four phenomenological parameters. This approach captures a number of possible inflationary models, including those with non-canonical kinetic terms or scale-dependent non-gaussianities. We perform Markov Chain Monte Carlo analyses using the latest cosmological publicly available measurements, which include Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) data from the Planck satellite. Within this parametrization, we discard scale invariance with a significance of about $10\sigma$, and the running of the spectral index is constrained as $\alpha_s=-0.60\,^{+0.08}_{-0.10}\times 10^{-3}$ ($68\%$~CL errors). The limit on the tensor-to-scalar ratio is $r<0.005$ at $95\%$~CL from CMB data alone. We find no significant evidence for this alternative parameterization with present cosmological observations. The maximum amplitude of the equilateral non-gaussianity that we obtain, $|f^{\text{equil}}_{\text{NL}}|< 1$, is much smaller than the current Planck mission errors, strengthening the case for future high-redshift, all-sky surveys, which could reach the required accuracy on equilateral non-gaussianities.

10.1016/j.dark.2017.07.003http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dark.2017.07.003