301 research outputs found
Geophysical constraint on a relic background of the dilatons
According to a scenario in string cosmology, a relic background of light
dilatons can be a significant component of the dark matter in the Universe. A
new approach of searching for such a dilatonic background by observing Earth's
surface gravity was proposed in my previous work. In this paper, the concept of
the geophysical search is briefly reviewed, and the geophysical constraint on
the dilaton background is presented as a function of the strength of the
dilaton coupling, . For simplicity, I focus on massless dilatons and
assume a simple Earth model. With the current upper limit on , we obtain
the upper limit on the dimensionless energy density of the massless background,
, which is about one-order of
magnitude more stringent than the one from astrophysical observations, at the
frequency of 7 10 Hz. If the magnitude of is
experimentally found to be smaller than the current upper limit by one order of
magnitude, the geophysical upper limit on becomes less
stringent and comparable to the one obtained from the astrophysical
observations.Comment: 6 pages, Proceedings for the 8th Edoardo Amaldi Conference on
Gravitational Waves, 21-26 June, 2009, Columbia University, New York, US
Determination of S17(0) from published data
The experimental landscape for the 7Be+p radiative capture reaction is
rapidly changing as new high precision data become available. We present an
evaluation of existing data, detailing the treatment of systematic errors and
discrepancies, and show how they constrain the astrophysical S factor (S17),
independent of any nuclear structure model. With theoretical models robustly
determining the behavior of the sub-threshold pole, the extrapolation error can
be reduced and a constraint placed on the slope of S17. Using only radiative
capture data, we find S17(0) = 20.7 +/- 0.6 (stat) +/- 1.0 (syst) eV b if data
sets are completely independent, while if data sets are completely correlated
we find S17(0) = 21.4 +/- 0.5 (stat) +/- 1.4 (syst) eV b. The truth likely lies
somewhere in between these two limits. Although we employ a formalism capable
of treating discrepant data, we note that the central value of the S factor is
dominated by the recent high precision data of Junghans et al., which imply a
substantially higher value than other radiative capture and indirect
measurements. Therefore we conclude that further progress will require new high
precision data with a detailed error budget.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure published versio
Radiative neutron capture on a proton at BBN energies
The total cross section for radiative neutron capture on a proton, , is evaluated at big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) energies. The
electromagnetic transition amplitudes are calculated up to next-to leading
order within the framework of pionless effective field theory with dibaryon
fields. We also calculate the cross section and the photon
analyzing power for the process from the amplitudes. The
values of low energy constants that appear in the amplitudes are estimated by a
Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis using the relevant low energy experimental
data. Our result agrees well with those of other theoretical calculations
except for the cross section at some energies estimated by an
R-matrix analysis. We also study the uncertainties in our estimation of the
cross section at relevant BBN energies and find that the
estimated cross section is reliable to within 1% error.Comment: 21 pages and 12 eps figures; 6 eps figures and 2 references added,
and accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Dependence of X-Ray Burst Models on Nuclear Reaction Rates
X-ray bursts are thermonuclear flashes on the surface of accreting neutron
stars and reliable burst models are needed to interpret observations in terms
of properties of the neutron star and the binary system. We investigate the
dependence of X-ray burst models on uncertainties in (p,),
(,), and (,p) nuclear reaction rates using fully
self-consistent burst models that account for the feedbacks between changes in
nuclear energy generation and changes in astrophysical conditions. A two-step
approach first identified sensitive nuclear reaction rates in a single-zone
model with ignition conditions chosen to match calculations with a
state-of-the-art 1D multi-zone model based on the {\Kepler} stellar evolution
code. All relevant reaction rates on neutron deficient isotopes up to mass 106
were individually varied by a factor of 100 up and down. Calculations of the 84
highest impact reaction rate changes were then repeated in the 1D multi-zone
model. We find a number of uncertain reaction rates that affect predictions of
light curves and burst ashes significantly. The results provide insights into
the nuclear processes that shape X-ray burst observables and guidance for
future nuclear physics work to reduce nuclear uncertainties in X-ray burst
models.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables, submitte
Dark energy and dark matter from cosmological observations
The present status of our knowledge about the dark matter and dark energy is
reviewed. Bounds on the content of cold and hot dark matter from cosmological
observations are discussed in some detail. I also review current bounds on the
physical properties of dark energy, mainly its equation of state and effective
speed of sound.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Lepton-Photon 2005 proceedings,
added figure and typos correcte
Nucleosynthesis and the variation of fundamental couplings
We determine the influence of a variation of the fundamental ``constants'' on
the predicted helium abundance in Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. The analytic
estimate is performed in two parts: the first step determines the dependence of
the helium abundance on the nuclear physics parameters, while the second step
relates those parameters to the fundamental couplings of particle physics. This
procedure can incorporate in a flexible way the time variation of several
couplings within a grand unified theory while keeping the nuclear physics
computation separate from any model-dependent assumptions.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
Primordial Nucleosynthesis
Primordial nucleosynthesis, or Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN), is one of the
three evidences for the Big-Bang model, together with the expansion of the
Universe and the Cosmic Microwave Background. There is a good global agreement
over a range of nine orders of magnitude between abundances of 4He, D, 3He and
7Li deduced from observations, and calculated in primordial nucleosynthesis.
This comparison was used to determine the baryonic density of the Universe. For
this purpose, it is now superseded by the analysis of the Cosmic Microwave
Background (CMB) radiation anisotropies. However, there remain, a yet
unexplained, discrepancy of a factor 3-5, between the calculated and observed
lithium primordial abundances, that has not been reduced, neither by recent
nuclear physics experiments, nor by new observations. We review here the
nuclear physics aspects of BBN for the production of 4He, D, 3He and 7Li, but
also 6Li, 9Be, 11B and up to CNO isotopes. These are, for instance, important
for the initial composition of the matter at the origin of the first stars.
Big-Bang nucleosynthesis, that has been used, to first constrain the baryonic
density, and the number of neutrino families, remains, a valuable tool to probe
the physics of the early Universe, like variation of "constants" or alternative
theories of gravity.Comment: Invited Plenary Talk given at the 11th International Conference on
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio, Texas, USA, May 27-June 1,
2012. To appear in the NN2012 Proceedings in Journal of Physics: Conference
Series (JPCS
Dark matter from SU(4) model
The left-right symmetric Pati-Salam model of the unification of quarks and
leptons is based on SU(4) and SU(2)xSU(2) groups. These groups are naturally
extended to include the classification of families of quarks and leptons. We
assume that the family group (the group which unites the families) is also the
SU(4) group. The properties of the 4-th generation of fermions are the same as
that of the ordinary-matter fermions in first three generations except for the
family charge of the SU(4)_F group: F=(1/3,1/3,1/3,-1), where F=1/3 for
fermions of ordinary matter and F=-1 for the 4-th generation. The difference in
F does not allow the mixing between ordinary and fourth-generation fermions.
Because of the conservation of the F charge, the creation of baryons and
leptons in the process of electroweak baryogenesis must be accompanied by the
creation of fermions of the 4-th generation. As a result the excess n_B of
baryons over antibaryons leads to the excess n_{\nu 4}=N-\bar N=n_B of
neutrinos over antineutrinos in the 4-th generation. This massive
fourth-generation neutrino may form the non-baryonic dark matter. In principle
their mass density n_{\nu 4}m_N in the Universe can give the main contribution
to the dark matter, since the lower bound on neutrino mass m_N from the data on
decay of the Z-bosons is m_N > m_Z/2. The straightforward prediction of this
model leads to the amount of cold dark matter relative to baryons, which is an
order of magnitude bigger than allowed by observations. This inconsistency may
be avoided by non-conservation of the F-charge.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, version accepted in JETP Letters, corrected after
referee reports, references are adde
Solar Neutrino Constraints on the BBN Production of Li
Using the recent WMAP determination of the baryon-to-photon ratio, 10^{10}
\eta = 6.14 to within a few percent, big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN)
calculations can make relatively accurate predictions of the abundances of the
light element isotopes which can be tested against observational abundance
determinations. At this value of \eta, the Li7 abundance is predicted to be
significantly higher than that observed in low metallicity halo dwarf stars.
Among the possible resolutions to this discrepancy are 1) Li7 depletion in the
atmosphere of stars; 2) systematic errors originating from the choice of
stellar parameters - most notably the surface temperature; and 3) systematic
errors in the nuclear cross sections used in the nucleosynthesis calculations.
Here, we explore the last possibility, and focus on possible systematic errors
in the He3(\alpha,\gamma)Be7 reaction, which is the only important Li7
production channel in BBN. The absolute value of the cross section for this key
reaction is known relatively poorly both experimentally and theoretically. The
agreement between the standard solar model and solar neutrino data thus
provides additional constraints on variations in the cross section (S_{34}).
Using the standard solar model of Bahcall, and recent solar neutrino data, we
can exclude systematic S_{34} variations of the magnitude needed to resolve the
BBN Li7 problem at > 95% CL. Additional laboratory data on
He3(\alpha,\gamma)Be7 will sharpen our understanding of both BBN and solar
neutrinos, particularly if care is taken in determining the absolute cross
section and its uncertainties. Nevertheless, it already seems that this
``nuclear fix'' to the Li7 BBN problem is unlikely; other possible solutions
are briefly discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 3 ps figure
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