Primordial black holes save R2 inflation

Abstract

In light of the latest Planck and Atacama Cosmology Telescope (P-ACT) joint results on the primordial scalar power spectrum, we show that the R2 inflation model extended with a non-minimally coupled scalar field --namely the -extended R2 inflation model--can naturally accommodate a larger spectral index ns and a small positive running αs at cosmic microwave background (CMB) scales, both of which are consistent with the latest P-ACT constraints. This is because the field contributes a blue-tilted component to the primordial power spectrum, which both modifies the large-scale power and, as a result, significantly enhances power on small scales. The deviation of the ns and αs from the single field R2 inflation is related to the non-minimal coupling constant . The consequent enhancement in the primordial power spectrum can be large enough to lead to the formation of primordial black holes (PBHs) of mass 1020g as dark matter candidates. Furthermore, future observations of the small-scale power spectrum, CMB spectral distortions, and stochastic gravitational waves will provide decisive tests of this model and its predictions for PBHs. We stress its strong connection to the seesaw mechanism for the generation of the observed small masses.

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