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Big Bang nucleosynthesis with a stiff fluid

Abstract

Models that lead to a cosmological stiff fluid component, with a density ρS\rho_S that scales as a6a^{-6}, where aa is the scale factor, have been proposed recently in a variety of contexts. We calculate numerically the effect of such a stiff fluid on the primordial element abundances. Because the stiff fluid energy density decreases with the scale factor more rapidly than radiation, it produces a relatively larger change in the primordial helium-4 abundance than in the other element abundances, relative to the changes produced by an additional radiation component. We show that the helium-4 abundance varies linearly with the density of the stiff fluid at a fixed fiducial temperature. Taking ρS10\rho_{S10} and ρR10\rho_{R10} to be the stiff fluid energy density and the standard density in relativistic particles, respectively, at T=10T = 10 MeV, we find that the change in the primordial helium abundance is well-fit by ΔYp=0.00024(ρS10/ρR10)\Delta Y_p = 0.00024(\rho_{S10}/\rho_{R10}). The changes in the helium-4 abundance produced by additional radiation or by a stiff fluid are identical when these two components have equal density at a "pivot temperature", TT_*, where we find T=0.55T_* = 0.55 MeV. Current estimates of the primordial 4^4He abundance give the constraint on a stiff fluid energy density of ρS10/ρR10<30\rho_{S10}/\rho_{R10} < 30.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Clarification added: element abundances derived using a full numerical calculation. Version accepted at PR

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