Reheating and thermalization: Linear versus nonlinear relaxation
Jul, 1995
34 pages
Published in:
- Phys.Rev.D 52 (1995) 6805-6827
e-Print:
- hep-ph/9507414 [hep-ph]
Report number:
- PITT-17-95,
- LPTHE-95-42,
- UPRF-95-428,
- DOR-ER-40682-46
Citations per year
Abstract:
We consider the case of a scalar field, the inflaton, coupled to both lighter scalars and fermions, and the study the relaxation of the inflaton via particle production in both the linear and non-linear regimes. This has an immediate application to the reheating problem in inflationary universe models. The linear regime analysis offers a rationale for the standard approach to the reheating problem, but we make a distinction between relaxation and thermalization. We find that particle production when the inflaton starts in the {\it non-linear} region is typically a far more efficient way of transfering energy out of the inflaton zero mode and into the quanta of the lighter scalar than single particle decay. For the non-linear regime we take into account self-consistently the evolution of the expectation value of the inflaton field coupled to the evolution of the quantum fluctuations. An exhaustive numerical analysis reveals that the distribution of produced particles is far from thermal, and the effect of open channels. In the fermionic case, Pauli blocking begins to hinder the transfer of energy into the fermion modes very early on in the evolution of the inflaton. We examine the implications of our results to the question of how to calculate the reheating temperature of the universe after inflation.- inflation
- field theory: scalar
- fermion
- postulated particle: inflaton
- particle: production
- production: particle
- finite temperature
- spontaneous symmetry breaking
- mass: inflaton
- inflaton: mass
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