Possible Evidence for Planck-Scale Resonant Particle Production during Inflation from the CMB Power Spectrum

ORAL

Abstract

The power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background from both the {\it Planck} and {\it WMAP} data exhibits a slight dip for multipoles in the range of $l= 10-30$. We show that such a dip could be the result of the resonant creation of massive particles that couple to the inflaton field. For our best-fit models, the epoch of resonant particle creation reenters the horizon at a wave number of $k_* \sim 0.00011 \pm 0.0004 $ ($h$ Mpc$^{-1}$). The amplitude and location of this feature corresponds to the creation of a number of degenerate fermion species of mass $\sim (8-11) /\lambda^{3/2} $ $m_{pl}$ during inflation where $\lambda \sim (1.0 \pm 0.5) N^{-2/5}$ is the coupling constant between the inflaton field and the created fermion species, while $N$ is the number of degenerate species. Although the evidence is of marginal statistical significance, this could constitute new observational hints of unexplored physics beyond the Planck scale.

Authors

  • Mayukh Gangopadhyay

    Univ of Notre Dame

  • Grant Mathews

    University of Notre Dame, Univ of Notre Dame

  • Kiyotomo Ichiki

    National Astronomical Observatory, Japan

  • Toshitaka Kajino

    University of Tokyo, Department of Astronomy