Primordial Black Holes from a tiny bump/dip in the Inflaton potential

Abstract

Scalar perturbations during inflation can be substantially amplified by tiny features in the inflaton potential. A bump-like feature behaves like a local speed-breaker and lowers the speed of the scalar field, thereby locally enhancing the scalar power spectrum. A bump-like feature emerges naturally if the base inflaton potential Vb(φ) contains a local correction term such as Vb(φ)[1+(φ)] at φ=φ0. The presence of such a localised correction term at φ0 leads to a large peak in the curvature power spectrum and to an enhanced probability of black hole formation. Remarkably this does not significantly affect the scalar spectral index n_S and tensor to scalar ratio r on CMB scales. Consequently such models can produce higher mass primordial black holes (M PBH≥ 1 M) in contrast to models with `near inflection-point potentials' in which generating higher mass black holes severely affects n_S and r. With a suitable choice of the base potential - such as the string theory based (KKLT) inflation or the α-attractor models - the amplification of primordial scalar power spectrum can be as large as 107 which leads to a significant contribution of primordial black holes (PBHs) to the dark matter density today, f PBH = 0, PBH/0, DM O(1). Interestingly, our results remain valid if the bump is replaced by a dip. In this case the base inflaton potential Vb(φ) contains a negative local correction term such as Vb(φ)[1-(φ)] at φ=φ0 which leads to an enhanced probability of PBH formation. We conclude that primordial black holes in the mass range 10-17 M ≤ M PBH ≤ 100\, M can easily form in single field inflation in the presence of small bump-like and dip-like features in the inflaton potential.

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