Radiative Corrections in Supergravity Models of Inflation
Abstract
Supergravity provides the natural supersymmetric framework for early universe cosmology. A broad class of inflationary models in no-scale supergravity yields tree-level predictions for cosmic microwave background (CMB) observables that closely resemble those of the Starobinsky R + R2 model. Using results from global supersymmetry and supergravity, we analyze radiative corrections in models with canonical and non-canonical kinetic terms, focusing particularly on Starobinsky-like no-scale supergravity models. We derive conditions on the superpotential that keep the gravitino mass finite during inflation and ensure that loop-induced corrections to the K\"ahler potential remain either finite or subdominant relative to the tree-level potential. We show that in some models, most notably the original no-scale supergravity model with a Wess-Zumino superpotential, radiative corrections grow at large inflaton field values and can dominate the inflationary dynamics, rendering unreliable the model predictions for CMB data. However, we identify a class of no-scale Starobinsky-like models, including the Cecotti model, in which radiative corrections remain very small for inflaton field values 8 (in Planck units), preserving the agreement of the tree-level predictions with Planck CMB data.
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