Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMary Benson Modified over 9 years ago
1
1 Lecture-04 Big-Bang Nucleosysthesis http://power.itp.ac.cn/~hep/cosmology.htm Ping He ITP.CAS.CN 2006.03.04
2
2 H, He, Li, … Light-elements are produced by big-bang nucleosysthesis (BBN); Heavy metals (<Fe) are created in stars; Super-heavy metals (>Fe) are generated in SNs. Basic Ideas of Nucleosynthesis
3
3 4.0 Preliminaries In nuclear physics For pre-exponential factors:
4
4 4.1 Nuclear Statistical Equilibrium (NSE) When thermal equilibrium, for nuclear species A, the number density is
5
5 Moreover, chemical equilibrium Eq-3.1 also applies to n, p, hence we have
6
6 Definition of binding energy of the nuclear species A(Z) Substituting Eq-3.3 into 3.1, the abundance of A is: Table-1
7
7 Define total nucleon density: So Eq-3.5 becomes: Baryon-to-photon ratio So in NSE, the mass fraction of species A, 丰度:质量百分比 n B =n N
8
8 4.2 Initial Conditions (T>>1MeV, t<<1sec) Key points: neutron-to-proton ratio The balance of neutron and proton is maintained by the weak interactions: IfChemical equilibrium
9
9 So, we have: Based upon charge neutrality, we have: Similarly:
10
10 The equilibrium n/p ratio: T → high n/p → 1
11
11 Rates for interactions between neutrons and protons, for example In terms of neutron lifetime
12
12 Lifetime of neutron Since So half-life of neutron: In fact:
13
13 So, we have: where In high- and low-Temperature limits:
14
14 By comparing to the expansion rate,, we have: Thus when T>0.8MeV, n/p -> equilibrium value, from (Eq-3.12), T->high, n/p ->1 At T>1MeV, rates of nuclear reactions for building up the light elements are also high -->NSE
15
15 Consider the following light elements: n, p, D-2, He-3, He-4, C-12, in NSE, the mass fractions are:
16
16 From Eq-3.7, when X T nuc (MeV) D-20.07 He-30.11 He-40.28 C-120.25 Table-2
17
17 4.3 Production of the Light Elements: 1-2-3 The weak rates are much larger than the expansion rate H, so (n/p)=(n/p) eq ~1, and light elements are also in NSE. From Eq-3.20 to Eq-3.25 4.3.1 step 1 ( t= sec, T=10MeV)
18
18 4.3.2 step 2 ( t= 1sec, T=T F =1MeV) The weak interactions that interconvert n and p freeze out ( ) Not really constant due to residual weak interactions. The deviation of n/p from its equilibrium value becomes significant by the time nucleosynthesis begins. (See Fig.4.1) (See Fig.4.1) At this time, the light nuclei are still in NSE.
19
19 4.3.3 step 3 ( t= 1 to 3 minutes, T=0.3 to 0.1 MeV) Major nuclear reactions: due to occasional weak interactions
20
20 is very low, due to a). low abundances for D-2, He-3, and H-3, their NSE values: The light-element bottleneck Deuterium bottleneck: NSE that is, there are 109-1010 photons around one nucleon. So when T=0.1MeV, t=3min, not enough high-energy photons (E>2.2MeV) to disassociate D-2.
21
21 b). Coulomb-barrier suppression: : thermally-averaged cross section times relative velocity. If abundances of D-2, He-3, H-3 1 at T NUC =0.1MeV Bottleneck is broken
22
22 Li-7: An abundance of the order, is predicted by: H/p and He-4 are in dominative amounts; Nuclei of A=5 and 8 are unstable, and with high Coulomb-barrier suppression, BBN is stopped at He-4, so that no heavier elements produced. Substantial amounts of both D-2 and He-3 are left: So:
23
23 So, T should not be too high, i.e., T<0.1MeV, t=3min otherwise, photon disassociation However, T should not be too low, i.e., T>0.02MeV, t~1hr otherwise, kinetic energy not high enough to penetrate Coulomb potential.
24
24 4.4 Primordial Abundances: Predictions What affect primordial nucleosynthesis?
25
25 An accurate analytic fit for primordial mass fraction of He-4 Primordial He-4 abundance Li-7 production process-I Li-7 production process-II
26
26 4.5 Primordial Abundances: Observations Primordial nucleosynthesis: 3min 1hr Age of the universe: 13.8 billion years The difficulty of measurement: contaminants from astrophysical processes, such as stellar production and destruction. Specifically: 4.5.1 measurement of D a) via the UV absorption studies of the local interstellar medium (ISM) in the solar system. Atmosphere of Jupiter : (DCO, DHO) Consistent with Hard task
27
27 b) high-z QSO absorption line Since deuteron is weakly-bound easy to be destroyed Primordial NSE value of D/H < 10^(-13), only when “the deuterium bottleneck” is broken, deuteron can be accumulated in great amount. In a star, more dense, so in NSE D/H < 10^(-13) See Fig-4.4, constrain :
28
28 4.5.2 measurement of He-3 hotter interiors: He-3 is destroyed cooler outer layers: He-3 is preserved low mass star : new He-3 from hydrogen burning Notice that in a star, the processes for He-3 more complicated: a) measure of oldest meteorites: b) measure of solar wind: Also provides constraint to
29
29 4.5.3 measurement of He-4 He-4 can also be synthesis in stars Hence, low Z low Y Primordial abundance
30
30 Predicted He-4 abundance Present observations suggest that:
31
31 4.5.4 measurement of Li-7 Lithium abundances versus metallicity (from a compilation of stellar observations by V.V. Smith.)
32
32 Problem?
33
33 4.6 Primordial Nucleosynthesis as a Probe a) non-baryonic form of matter From the concordance of D, He-3, He-4, Li-7 abundances, we derive From dynamical determinations Dark matter
34
34 b) Number of light neutrino flavors present observation or cold components
35
35 4.7 Final Words Primordial nucleosynthesis: agreement between theory and observation indicating the standard cosmology is valid back to 10- 2 sec, or T=10MeV; Works as a probe for cosmology ( B), and particle physics ( v), etc; More precise observations for D, He-3, He-4, Li- 7 are of great importance.
36
36 References E.W. Kolb & M.S. Turner, The Early Universe, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1993 L. Bergstrom & A. Goobar, Cosmology and Particle Astrophysics, Springer, 2004 M.S. Longair, Galaxy Formation, Springer, 1998 俞允强,热大爆炸宇宙学,北京大学出版社, 2001 范祖辉, Course Notes on Physical Cosmology, See this site.this site
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.