Revisiting Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis Constraints on Long-Lived Decaying Particles

Sep 4, 2017
22 pages
Published in:
  • Phys.Rev.D 97 (2018) 2, 023502
  • Published: Jan 9, 2018
e-Print:
Report number:
  • KEK-COSMO-211,
  • IPMU17-0117,
  • UT-17-29,
  • KEK-Cosmo-211,
  • KEK-TH-1998

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Abstract: (APS)
We study the effects of long-lived massive particles, which decayed during the big-bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) epoch, on the primordial abundance of light elements. Compared to previous studies, (i) the reaction rates of standard BBN reactions are updated, (ii) the most recent observational data on the light element abundance and cosmological parameters are used, (iii) the effects of the interconversion of energetic nucleons at the time of inelastic scattering with background nuclei are considered, and (iv) the effects of the hadronic shower induced by energetic high-energy antinucleons are included. We compare the theoretical predictions on the primordial abundance of light elements with the latest observational constraints, and we derive upper bounds on the relic abundance of the decaying particle as a function of its lifetime. We also apply our analysis to an unstable gravitino, the superpartner of a graviton in supersymmetric theories, and obtain constraints on the reheating temperature after inflation.
Note:
  • 36 pages, 15 figures. Inaccuracy in the numerical calculation of photodissociation rates is corrected. Main conclusions are unchanged
  • nucleosynthesis: big bang
  • particle: massive
  • temperature: reheating
  • long-lived
  • inelastic scattering
  • relic density
  • gravitino
  • stability
  • primordial