5–6 Feb 2018
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

What can we learn from the stochastic gravitational wave background produced by oscillons?

5 Feb 2018, 11:55
20m
CERN

CERN

Speaker

Francesco Cefalà (University of Basel)

Description

The stochastic gravitational wave (GW) background provides a fascinating window to the physics of the very early universe. Beyond the nearly scale-invariant primordial GW spectrum produced during inflation, a spectrum with a much richer structure is typically generated during the preheating phase after inflation (or after some other phase transition at lower energies). This raises the question of what one can learn from a future observation of the stochastic gravitational wave background spectrum about the underlying physics during preheating. Recently, it has been shown that during preheating non-perturbative quasi-stable objects like oscillons can act as strong sources for GW, leading to characteristic features such as distinct peaks in the spectrum. In this talk, I will discuss how the GW spectrum is affected by the parameters that characterise a given oscillon system, e.g. by the background cosmology, the asymmetry of the oscillons and the evolution of the number density of the oscillons. In addition, a comparison between semi-analytical results and results from numerical lattice simulations for a hilltop inflation model and a KKLT scenario, which differ strongly in some of these characteristics will be shown.

Presentation materials