Abstract
Abstract
We revisit the idea that the inflaton may have dissipated part of its energy into a
thermal bath during inflation, considering monomial inflationary potentials and three different
forms of dissipation rate. Using a numerical Fokker-Planck approach to describe the stochastic
dynamics of inflationary fluctuations, we confront this scenario with current bounds on the
spectrum of curvature fluctuations and primordial gravitational waves. We also obtain purely
analytical approximations that improve over previously used ones in the small dissipation regime
for the amplitude of the spectrum and its tilt. We show that only our numerical Fokker-Planck
method is accurate, fast and precise enough to test these models against current data. We advocate
its use in future studies of warm inflation. We also apply the stochastic inflation formalism to
this scenario, finding that the resulting spectrum is the same as the one obtained with standard
perturbation theory. We discuss the origin and convenience of using a commonly implemented large
thermal correction to the primordial spectrum and the implications of such a term for a specific
scenario. Improved bounds on the scalar spectral index will further constrain warm inflation in
the near future.
Cited by
2 articles.
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