A light particle solution to the cosmic lithium problem [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1510.08858


We point out that the cosmological abundance of ${}^7$Li can be reduced down to observed values if during its formation Big Bang Nucleosynthesis is modified by the presence of light electrically neutral particles $X$ that have substantial interactions with nucleons. We find that the lithium problem can be solved without affecting the precisely measured abundances of deuterium and helium if the following conditions are satisfied: the mass and lifetimes of such particles are bounded by $ 1.6~{\rm MeV}\leq m_X \leq 20~{\rm MeV}$ and $ {\rm few}~100~{\rm s} \lesssim \tau_X \lesssim 10^4~{\rm s}$, and the abundance times the absorption cross section by either deuterium or ${}^7$Be are comparable to the Hubble rate, $n_X \sigma_{\rm abs} v \sim H$, at the time of ${}^7$Be formation. We include $X$-initiated reactions into the primordial nucleosynthesis framework, observe that it leads to a substantial reduction of the freeze-out abundances of ${}^7$Li+${}^7$Be, and find specific model realizations of this scenario. Concentrating on the axion-like-particle case, $X=a$, we show that all these conditions can be satisifed if the coupling to $d$-quarks is in the range of $f_d^{-1} \sim {\rm TeV}^{-1}$, which can be probed at intensity frontier experiments.

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Goudelis, M. Pospelov and J. Pradler
Mon, 2 Nov 15
51/51

Comments: 5 pages, 4 figures