Formation of primordial black holes from warm inflation

Published 21 September 2020 © 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd and Sissa Medialab
, , Citation Richa Arya JCAP09(2020)042 DOI 10.1088/1475-7516/2020/09/042

1475-7516/2020/09/042

Abstract

Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) serve as a unique probe to the physics of the early Universe, particularly inflation. In light of this, we study the formation of PBHs by the collapse of overdense perturbations generated during a model of warm inflation. For our model, we find that the primordial curvature power spectrum is red-tilted (spectral index ns<1) at the large scales (small k) and is consistent with the nsr values allowed from the CMB observations. Along with that, it has a blue-tilt (ns>1) for the small PBH scales (large k), with a sufficiently large amplitude of the primordial curvature power spectrum required to form PBHs. These features originate because of the inflaton's coupling with the other fields during warm inflation. We discuss the role of the inflaton dissipation to the enhancement in the primordial power spectrum at the PBH scales. We find that for some parameter range of our warm inflation model, PBHs with mass ∼ 103 g can be formed with significant abundance. Such tiny mass PBHs have a short lifetime ∼ 10−19 s and would have evaporated into Hawking radiation in the early Universe. Further in this study, we discuss the evaporation constraints on the initial mass fraction of the generated PBHs and the possibility of Planck mass PBH relics to constitute the dark matter.

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10.1088/1475-7516/2020/09/042