15 research outputs found

    The first second of leptons

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    Stuke M. The first second of leptons. Bielefeld (Germany): Bielefeld University; 2011.We study the influence of lepton asymmetries on the evolution of the early Universe. The lepton asymmetry l is poorly constrained by observations and might be orders of magnitudes larger than the observed baryon asymmetry b~O(10^{-10}), |l|/b~O(10^9). We find that lepton asymmetries large compared to the tiny baryon asymmetry, can influence the dynamics of the QCD phase transition significantly. The cosmic trajectory in the mu_{B}-T phase diagram of strongly interacting matter becomes a function of lepton (flavour) asymmetry. For tiny or vanishing baryon and lepton asymmetries lattice QCD simulations show that the cosmic QCD transition is a rapid crossover. However, for large lepton asymmetry, the order of the cosmic transition remains unknown. We find that a large asymmetry in one or more lepton flavour changes the number of helicity degrees of freedom of all particles in equilibrium g_{ast} significantly. For the relic abundance of WIMPs, depending on g_{ast} of all particles at the freeze out temperature 40 GeV > T_fo > 0.4 GeV we find a decreasing of few percent depending on l_f . For an asymmetry of l_f = 0.1 in all three flavour we find a decrease of the relic WIMP abundance for a given freeze out temperature of almost 20 percent

    First second of leptons

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    A poorly constrained parameter in the Standard Model of Cosmology is the lepton asymmetry l = \sum_f l_f=\sum_f(n_f+n_{\nu_f})/s. Each flavour asymmetry l_f with f=e, \mu, {\tau} is the sum of the net particle density of the charged leptons n_f and their corresponding neutrinos, normalized with the entropy density s. Constraints on l_f \leq O(0.1) from BBN and CMB allow for lepton flavour asymmetries orders of magnitudes larger then the baryon asymmetry b ~ 10^{-10}. In this article we show how such large lepton (flavour) asymmetries influence the early universe, in particular the freeze out of WIMPs and the cosmic QCD transition.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; prepared for the 12th international conference on Topics in Astroparticle and Underground Physics, TAUP2011. v2: matches accepted versio

    Effects of a Cut, Lorentz-Boosted sky on the Angular Power Spectrum

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    The largest fluctuation in the observed CMB temperature field is the dipole, its origin being usually attributed to the Doppler Effect - the Earth's velocity with respect to the CMB rest frame. The lowest order boost correction to temperature multipolar coefficients appears only as a second order correction in the temperature power spectrum, CC_{\ell}. Since v/c - 10-3, this effect can be safely ignored when estimating cosmological parameters [4-7]. However, by cutting our galaxy from the CMB sky we induce large-angle anisotropies in the data. In this case, the corrections to the cut-sky CC_{\ell}s show up already at first order in the boost parameter. In this paper we investigate this issue and argue that this effect might turn out to be important when reconstructing the power spectrum from the cut-sky data.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur

    Particle asymmetries in the early universe

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    The total lepton asymmetry l=flfl=\sum_f l_f in our universe is only poorly constrained by theories and experiments. It might be orders of magnitudes larger than the observed baryon asymmetry bO(1010)b\simeq {\cal O}(10^{-10}), l/bO(109)|l|/b \leq {\cal O}(10^{9}). We found that the dynamics of the cosmic QCD transition changes for large asymmetries. Predictions for asymmetries in a single flavour lfl_f allow even larger values. We find that asymmetries of lfO(1)l_f\leq {\cal O}(1) in a single or two flavours change the relic abundance of WIMPs. However, large lepton and large individual lepton flavour asymmetries influences significantly the dynamics of the early universe.Comment: 7 pages,8 figures; Proceedings of the Erice workshop on Nuclear Physics 2010 "Particle and Nuclear Astrophysics

    Lepton asymmetry and the cosmic QCD transition

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    We study the influence of lepton asymmetry on the evolution of the early Universe. The lepton asymmetry ll is poorly constrained by observations and might be orders of magnitude larger than the baryon asymmetry bb, l/b2×108|l|/b \leq 2\times 10^8. We find that lepton asymmetries that are large compared to the tiny baryon asymmetry, can influence the dynamics of the QCD phase transition significantly. The cosmic trajectory in the μBT\mu_B-T phase diagram of strongly interacting matter becomes a function of lepton (flavour) asymmetry. Large lepton asymmetry could lead to a cosmic QCD phase transition of first order.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures; matches published version, including Erratum. Conclusions, pictures, numerics remained unchange

    WIMP abundance and lepton (flavour) asymmetry

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    We investigate how large lepton asymmetries affect the evolution of the early universe at times before big bang nucleosynthesis and in particular how they influence the relic density of WIMP dark matter. In comparison to the standard calculation of the relic WIMP abundance we find a decrease, depending on the lepton flavour asymmetry. We find an effect of up to 20 per cent for lepton flavour asymmetries lf=O(0.1)l_f= {\cal O}(0.1).Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures; v2:minor changes to some wording

    Does the CMB prefer a leptonic Universe?

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    Schwarz D, Stuke M. Does the CMB prefer a leptonic Universe? New Journal of Physics. 2013;15(3): 33021.Recent observations of the cosmic microwave background at smallest angular scales and updated abundances of primordial elements indicate an increase of the energy density and the helium-4 abundance with respect to standard big bang nucleosynthesis with three neutrino flavour. This calls for a reanalysis of the observational bounds on neutrino chemical potentials, which encode the number asymmetry between cosmic neutrinos and anti-neutrinos and thus measures the lepton asymmetry of the Universe. We compare recent data with a big bang nucleosynthesis code, assuming neutrino flavour equilibration via neutrino oscillations before the onset of big bang nucleosynthesis. We find a preference for negative neutrino chemical potentials, which would imply an excess of anti-neutrinos and thus a negative lepton number of the Universe. This lepton asymmetry could exceed the baryon asymmetry by orders of magnitude
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