Abstract

We propose a minimal framework to address successful quartic inflation, dark matter (DM) production in the early universe and non-vanishing tiny Majorana neutrino mass from a common gravitational origin point of view. In this setup, the quartic inflation is revived successfully via non-minimal coupling of inflaton to gravity while the production of DM takes place from purely gravitational effects through a misalignment mechanism. The generation of light Majorana neutrino mass is aided by explicit breaking of global lepton number symmetry through Planck suppressed operators involving non-zero vacuum expectation value (VEV) of the inflaton field. We present a detailed study of the DM yield in presence of non-minimal inflation, considering both the metric and the Palatini formalisms of gravity wherever appropriate. We reach at some interesting and different results in the DM sector compared to the earlier works in the similar direction with minimal inflationary background. Restricting to the light DM regime ( O ( 1 ) keV- O ( 100 ) MeV ) where classical production is expected to dominate over the quantum production, we numerically predict the DM mass by varying the DM quartic and non-minimal coupling, to be consistent with relic density requirements. We also obtain some non-trivial dependence of DM phenomenology on some of the relevant parameters of the inflation sector e.g. non minimal coupling and inflaton VEV. To explore the dependence on inflationary parameters further, we also estimate the DM relic using the same mechanism for two other inflationary models consistent with latest data and observe that one of these models predicts different range of DM mass up to hundreds of TeV.

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