327 research outputs found
Primordial Nucleosynthesis, Cosmic Microwave Background and Neutrinos
We report the results of a recent likelihood analysis combining the
primordial nucleosynthesis and the BOOMERanG and MAXIMA-1 data on cosmic
microwave background radiation anisotropies. We discuss the possible
implications for relic neutrino background of a high value for the baryonic
matter content of the universe, larger than what is expected in a standard
nucleosynthesis scenario.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, some typos corrected, one reference added,
presented by G. Mangano at NOW 2000, Europhysics Neutrino Oscillation
Workshop, Otranto 200
Ultrahigh energy neutrinos with a mediterranean neutrino telescope
A study of the ultra high energy neutrino detection performances of a km^3
Neutrino Telescope sitting at the three proposed sites for "ANTARES", "NEMO"
and "NESTOR" in the Mediterranean sea is here performed. The detected charged
leptons energy spectra, entangled with their arrival directions, provide an
unique tool to both determine the neutrino flux and the neutrino-nucleon cross
section.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, Proceedings of XII International Workshop on
Neutrino Telescopes, Venezia 200
Fermion Mass Matrices in term of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa Matrix and Mass Eigenvalues
A parameter free, model independent analysis of quark mass matrices is
carried out. We find a representation in terms of a diagonal mass matrix for
the down (up) quarks and a suitable matrix for the up (down) quarks, such that
the mass parameters only depend on the six quark masses and the three angles
and phase appearing in the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix. The results found
may also be applied to the Dirac mass matrices of the leptons.Comment: 7 pages LaTeX, no figures. Title changed, Particle Data Group
parametrization of CKM matrix used in equation (8), numerical values in table
1 evaluated using the quark mass values at the Z^o mass scale, equation (21)
eliminated and 2 references change
The standard and degenerate primordial nucleosynthesis versus recent experimental data
We report the results on Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) based on an updated
code, with accuracy of the order of 0.1% on He4 abundance, compared with the
predictions of other recent similar analysis. We discuss the compatibility of
the theoretical results, for vanishing neutrino chemical potentials, with the
observational data. Bounds on the number of relativistic neutrinos and baryon
abundance are obtained by a likelihood analysis. We also analyze the effect of
large neutrino chemical potentials on primordial nucleosynthesis, motivated by
the recent results on the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation spectrum. The
BBN exclusion plots for electron neutrino chemical potential and the effective
number of relativistic neutrinos are reported. We find that the standard BBN
seems to be only marginally in agreement with the recent BOOMERANG and MAXIMA-1
results, while the agreement is much better for degenerate BBN scenarios for
large effective number of neutrinos, N_\nu \sim 10.Comment: LaTeX2e, 41 pages, 20 figures. Minor changes and 4 figures slightly
modifie
The astrophysical -factor and its implications for Big Bang Nucleosynthesis
The \alpha+d\rightarrow\, ^6{\rm Li}+\gamma radiative capture is studied in
order to predict the Li primordial abundance. Within a two-body framework,
the particle and the deuteron are considered the structureless
constituents of Li. Five potentials are used to solve the
two-body problem: four of them are taken from the literature, only one having
also a tensor component. A fifth model is here constructed in order to
reproduce, besides the Li static properties as binding energy, magnetic
dipole and electric quadrupole moments, also the -state asymptotic
normalization coefficient (ANC). The two-body bound and scattering problem is
solved with different techniques, in order to minimize the numerical
uncertainty of the present results. The long-wavelength approximation is used,
and therefore only the electric dipole and quadrupole operators are retained.
The astrophysical -factor is found to be significantly sensitive to the ANC,
but in all the cases in good agreement with the available experimental data.
The theoretical uncertainty has been estimated of the order of few % when the
potentials which reproduce the ANC are considered, but increases up to % when all the five potential models are retained. The effect of this
-factor prediction on the Li primordial abundance is studied, using the
public code PArthENoPE. For the five models considered here we find H, with the baryon density parameter in
the 3- range of Planck 2015 analysis, .Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
A Positive Test for Fermi-Dirac Distributions of Quark-Partons
By describing a large class of deep inelastic processes with standard
parameterization for the different parton species, we check the characteristic
relationship dictated by Pauli principle: broader shapes for higher first
moments. Indeed, the ratios between the second and the first moment and the one
between the third and the second moment for the valence partons is an
increasing function of the first moment and agrees quantitatively with the
values found with Fermi-Dirac distributions.Comment: 15 pages LaTeX, 2 eps figures. Final version, to appear in Mod. Phys.
Lett.
Constraining neutrino physics with BBN and CMBR
We perform a likelihood analysis of the recent results on the anisotropy of
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation from the BOOMERanG and DASI experiments
to show that they single out an effective number of neutrinos in good agreement
with standard Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. We also consider degenerate Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis to provide new bounds on effective relativistic degrees of
freedom and, in particular, on neutrino chemical potential
. When including Supernova Ia data we find, at , and , .Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, some reference adde
Primordial Nucleosynthesis: from precision cosmology to fundamental physics
We present an up-to-date review of Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN). We discuss
the main improvements which have been achieved in the past two decades on the
overall theoretical framework, summarize the impact of new experimental results
on nuclear reaction rates, and critically re-examine the astrophysical
determinations of light nuclei abundances. We report then on how BBN can be
used as a powerful test of new physics, constraining a wide range of ideas and
theoretical models of fundamental interactions beyond the standard model of
strong and electroweak forces and Einstein's general relativity.Comment: 148 pages, 66 figures, revised version accepted by Physics Report
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