Having concluded that enforcing a smooth transition results in an order-of-magnitude increase in the ultimate scale factor of the subsequent single-component universe, we shall now examine the effects of this change on reheating, based on the preheating model of KLS [
22], in which the inflaton couples to a second scalar field
in the era following inflation, which is taken to be a matter-dominated universe. We shall evaluate preheating effects using a smooth interpolating power law with
, as described previously in
Section 4.1 as an example of a power law with
. We compare our results to those of the KLS model, which employs the scale factor
with a discontinuous slope. Our numerical analysis shows that the larger scale factor in the smooth model decreases the
occupation numbers
and dilutes the total number density
. The dilution arises naturally out of the volume increase due to the greater expansion of space—although the broad parametric resonance during preheating partially offsets the effect. Broad parametric resonance involves all modes of the scalar field
less than a specific maximum being involved in quasi-resonant interactions with the inflaton, and it causes an exponential increase in the number of
particles created.
7.1. Occupation Numbers
In this section and
Section 7.2, we briefly summarize the foundations of the detailed, extensive case that KLS present in support of their theory. The Lagrange density for the scalar field
coupled to the inflaton:
in expanding space with vanishing mass parameter
, generates the equation of motion
where
, for the Fourier mode
in momentum space. The inflaton at the end of inflation is a coherently oscillating field of form
, with amplitude envelope
[
24], so that
In slow-roll inflation, chaotic inflation, and other inflationary models in which the friction term
in the equation of motion (
1) becomes negligible, the inflaton exhibits sinusoidal oscillating behavior around
(here the argument of the sine function has time
t in units of
, which the KLS model uses throughout). The appearance of the Planck mass
in
derives from the Hubble parameter expressed in terms of the gravitational constant. The units of
k are m, and the scale factor, normalized in the Robertson–Walker metric with
today, remains dimensionless.
Broad parametric resonance consists of nonadiabatic oscillation of the
field in Fourier-space regions where the equation of motion is unstable. The character of the instability is revealed by converting Equation (
64) into the standard Mathieu equation. Rescaling the scalar field:
eliminates the friction-like term and so yields
Now, recasting the argument of the oscillating term by setting
completes the conversion into the Mathieu equation:
The prime represents the derivative with respect to the argument
z, and the two parameters in the equation are
The resonance behavior of solutions to the Mathieu equation depends on the values of these
and
q, which determine the stable and unstable regions.
Appendix D reproduces the standard plot depicting the stability and instability regions in the
q-
plane with a graph of the Mathieu equation parameters.
The oscillations of the scalar field exhibit adiabatic instability when
and energy transfer occurs between the inflaton and the scalar field
. Trial solutions of the Mathieu equation:
are unstable for real values of the Floquet characteristic exponent
[
32,
33].
Section 7.2 discusses
in more detail.
The mode occupation number
is the energy of the mode in question, divided by the single-particle energy
:
(The adjustment
to account for the zero-point energy density is effectively negligible).
Figure 12 reproduces the results of the discontinuous scale factor of the KLS model, for the scalar field mode amplitude
and the exponential increase in the corresponding occupation number
. The
t-axis timeline of both graphs becomes a count of the number of oscillations of the inflaton after
t is expressed in units of
, with which the revised equation of motion (
66) is
Broad parametric resonance preheating requires certain preconditions on and the Mathieu equation parameter q, and it begins shortly after the end of inflation, after approximately one quarter of an oscillation of the inflaton (KLS use this approximation to advance their analysis). With time defined in terms of the number of oscillation cycles, s, which makes the timeline consistent with that which we found for the continuous scale factor, our order-of-magnitude increase in the size of the cosmos also appears at around s.
In
Figure 12b, the scalar field spans many instability bands in the first ∼10 oscillations, as
q decreases substantially, and the resonances cause exponential growth in the occupation number. From about 12 to 17 oscillations, the growth flattens as
q lessens while crossing the stability region corresponding to
q values decreasing from about 2 to 1. Broad resonance and growth resume in the next 10 oscillations in the instability band for
and
, before ultimately terminating after
oscillations.
Appendix D also shows graph (b) of
Figure 12 superimposed on the final three instability regions of
Figure A1 (corresponding to decreasing
q as time progresses).
In
Figure 13, we repeat the presentation from
Figure 12 using the smooth transitional scale factor in place of the kinked scale factor of the KLS model. The scalar field and occupation number show sharp decreases from
Figure 12 and
Figure 13. We can examine the effect of the continuous scale factor more precisely by analyzing the root mean squares of
and
averaged over the 10 oscillations following the end of preheating, which occurs after approximately 34 oscillations. With time
t in units of
according to the KLS formalism, we can convert the scale factor units of time in seconds to oscillations:
We also used the assumption for
that broad parametric preheating begins after inflation ends, at one fourth of an oscillation. Then, we apply a factor of 10 for the approximate order-of-magnitude increase in the continuous
:
For
(in the
mode), we find a modest decline of
in the root mean square, due to the order-of-magnitude increase in the scale factor.
Figure 14 shows
for both forms of the scale factor for 10 oscillations following the end of broad resonance. The decrease in
because of the effect of the larger scale factor causes a reduction of just ∼0.002 in the root mean square of the occupation number
at 10 oscillations after broad resonance terminates.
Local maxima in
for the smooth scale factor in
Figure 14 occur at every half oscillation of
at
. At these points, where
in Equation (
72), the frequency reduces to
with values of less than one:
. For the 10 oscillation periods under consideration with the smooth scale factor model, this range of fractional frequencies has the effect of increasing the contribution of the term containing the kinetic energy
in the occupation number:
even as it tends to suppress the contribution of the potential-like
term. Thus, the small fractional frequency generates the local maxima. The range of larger frequencies with the cusped scale factor following the end of resonance,
, has less of an effect and intersperses some local minima, depending on the relative values of
and
at the half-oscillation times.
We are able to provide some understanding of the differences in appearance of
—that is, the greater degree of dispersion of the amplitudes above the average occupation number in
Figure 13b in comparison with
Figure 12b—by examining in detail the effect of the fractional frequency. At oscillation 36, for example, the occupation numbers
are approximately 45.3 and 40.2 for the cusped and smooth scale factor models, respectively. The kinetic term in the energy, amplified by the frequency, for the most part determines the occupation number in both models. The average occupation numbers over four oscillations from oscillation 34 to 38 are approximately 43.9 and 36.8, respectively—yielding an increase during this period of ∼0.03 with the cusped scale factor and ∼0.09 with the smooth model. The lower level of the scalar field in the smooth model and (more importantly) its time derivative moderate what would otherwise be an approximately
difference in the increases based on the values of
alone. Thus, we see the greater dispersion of amplitudes above the average
in
Figure 13.
Appendix E contains a table that lists some of the supporting data associated with the behavior around oscillation 36 and related graphs.
7.2. Number Density
The number density of the scalar field quanta has its basis in the process of broad parametric resonance KLS characterize in their paper as stochastic—that is, random. They show that the variation in the phase of the scalar field in the course of semiclassical interactions between the -particles and the oscillating inflaton field is very much greater than , which makes successive phases effectively random. However, this does not mean that the there is no net energy flow from one sector to the other. In fact, a growth in the number of particles between classical scattering events can be as much as three times as probable as a decrease, based on the numerical effect of possible values for the phase angle in the recurrence relation governing resonance. KLS also separate preheating into two time periods. The first period precedes all backreaction and rescattering, and the second period involves the effect of those interactions on the number density, which can be significant. Backreaction and rescattering are quantum effects in which the created -particles interact with the background inflaton field. In backreaction, interactions can alter the effective masses of the particles and the frequency of the inflaton oscillations. Rescattering involves a created particle scattering again, either off an inflaton or another -particle. However, KLS conclude that the duration of the second period is so brief that, during it, they can safely neglect the expansion of the universe, and their analysis of that part does not depend on the scale factor. Therefore, here, we shall determine the effect of the continuous scale factor on the number density conversely without including backreaction and rescattering.
Semiclassical scattering leading to quantum-mechanical
-particle production involves the interaction of the scalar field
and the background inflaton field oscillating around zero. KLS derive the number density of the
field from the adiabatic approximation solution to Equation (
66):
with the scalar field phase
and
representing the time at the end of the
oscillation—such that as time
, the inflaton field is oscillating around its minimum,
. The functions
and
are time-dependent Bogoliubov transformation coefficients [
34].
Around
, Equation (
66) becomes
The scalar field
with an effectively random phase
completes a half-oscillation at time
for
. As
for each half-oscillation of
, the inflaton field concurrently oscillates near zero, creating a period of nonadiabatic energy transfer, which leads to exponential growth in the number of
-quanta according to Equation (
69). At other times, the number density
remains stable. Introduction of parameters
recasts Equation (
78) as a differential equation with a parabolic cylinder function solution:
which is also the Schrödinger equation with an unstable quadratic potential,
.
Appendix F derives the largest mode to participate in the broad parametric resonance,
. The scattering of solutions
of Equation (
66) leads to a recurrence relation for the Bogoliubov coefficients, which may be represented by transfer matrix
KLS provide the reflection
and transmission
amplitudes from the solutions of the parabolic cylinder equation and also the phase angle
, which is a complicated function of the parameter
:
With these, the recurrence relation becomes
Note that the occupation number
in Equation (
71) just depends on the Bogoliubov coefficient
[
35]:
and that for a coherent process
, it leads to the recurrence relation
with the accumulated phase
Because the variation in the phases
is very much greater than
, the randomness of
—and by extension the randomness of
and
as functions of
—make
stochastic. Noting that resonance begins to be suppressed unless
, KLS found that, for
, a growth in the number of particles is three times as likely as a decrease. Within the range
, values of
and
cause an increase in the number of particles according to Equation (
85); only over one quarter of the possible range of phases,
, does the number of
-particles decrease, as energy flows (incoherently) back to the inflaton field. A second recurrence relation also obtainable [
32] from the Mathieu Equation (
67):
in combination with Equation (
85), yields the Floquet characteristic exponent
Integration of
for all modes that participate in broad parametric resonance gives rise to the total number density of
-quanta:
The units of number density
are the expected m
, since occupation number
is dimensionless. KLS evaluate the integral on the far-right-hand side of Equation (
89) by the steepest descent method and estimate the number density to be
They also determine the maximum Floquet characteristic exponent
associated with an unknown maximum
, estimated as
.
We use the proportionality
to perform a numerical analysis of the effect of the continuous scale factor by examining the ratio
The terms
and
represent the number densities of the smooth and cusped scale factor models, respectively. We anticipate a decrease in the number density due to the increase in volume, moderated to a certain amount by the dependence of the proportionality in Equation (
91) on
. The use of the proportionality eliminates the dependence on the unknown mode
, which KLS estimate as
, as detailed in
Appendix F.
In the absence of
, the greater time allowed for the expansion of space in the smooth model would on its own cause dilution—that is, a decrease in the number density. The order-of-magnitude increase in the smooth scale factor alone would reduce the number density by the cube of the scale factor increase: ∼10
. However, the effect of the broad parametric resonance in preheating—in particular, the term
—may modestly offset the mere increase in the volume of space. The extent of the offset is dependent on the stochastic
in Equation (
88).
Figure 15 displays the ratio
of number density of the smooth scale factor to the discontinuous scale factor as a function of time (again expressed as the number of oscillations). The value of the ratio at the start of preheating, ∼10
, reflects the effect only of the expansion of space. As preheating progresses, however,
rises to a level slightly greater than
at the end of broad parametric resonance, at around 34 oscillations, in the limiting case in which
is consistently equal to
. In contrast, as
increases toward 1,
decreases. For example, at
,
, and
is about
at
. With a slightly larger stochastic value,
is not directly calculable via this method at lower oscillations, and with a stochastic phase of
, the calculations of both
and
, even at the end of 34 oscillations, because that would require the Floquet index
in Equation (
88) to be negative. The negative Floquet index signals an essentially unphysical solution, which the model formalism does not support; physically, this scenario would describe a net energy flowing back into the inflaton field, while mathematically, the formalism breaks down because the saddle point integration method is no longer usable. Thus, examination of the ratio
places a bound on the effect of the continuous scale factor. The reduction of the number density due to the expansion of space alone, ∼10
, increases only slightly, by, at most, about
after preheating, depending on the values of the stochastic
angles.