Research Seminars @ Illinois

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Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

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High Energy Physics Seminar - Aurora Ireland (Stanford) "A Classical-to-Quantum Transition for Inflationary Perturbations"

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Physics Department
Location
Rhondale Tso Seminar Room, Loomis 236
Date
Oct 31, 2025   11:00 am  
Speaker
Aurora Ireland (Stanford)
Contact
Brandy Koebbe
E-Mail
bkoebbe@illinois.edu
Views
7
Originating Calendar
Physics - High Energy Physics Seminar

Inflationary perturbations are fundamentally quantum. In practice, though, it is customary to treat them as classical stochastic fields when computing cosmological observables. This replacement relies on a "quantum-to-classical" transition which occurs on superhorizon scales during slow-roll inflation. At the closed-system level, the success of this transition relies on the suppression of the decaying mode (or equivalently, strong squeezing in the Schrödinger picture). 

Of course, many well-motivated inflationary scenarios deviate from slow roll. In particular, models seeking to enhance small-scale power (e.g. for primordial black hole formation) generically rely on a revival of the decaying mode. Near the transition point where growing and decaying modes exchange dominance, interference effects can become important, potentially invalidating a stochastic description. 

 Employing the EFT of inflation and working to all orders in perturbation theory, we analyze the dynamics of quantum fluctuations in a background featuring a transient deviation from slow roll. In the far superhorizon limit, we construct the Wigner function W, whose positivity can be used to diagnose the availability of a stochastic description. We find that W becomes highly oscillatory and negative in certain regions of phase space --- a hallmark of quantum interference and non-classicality. Remarkably, these effects persist even upon the return to slow roll, indicating a kind of "classical-to-quantum" transition for the affected modes. We conclude that squeezing, or equivalently the size of linear theory growing and decaying modes, is not a reliable indicator of classicality.

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