Nucleosynthesis Constraints on a Massive Gravitino in Neutralino Dark Matter Scenarios
Abstract
The decays of massive gravitinos into neutralino dark matter particles and Standard Model secondaries during or after Big-Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) may alter the primordial light-element abundances. We present here details of a new suite of codes for evaluating such effects, including a new treatment based on PYTHIA of the evolution of showers induced by hadronic decays of massive, unstable particles such as a gravitino. We also develop an analytical treatment of non-thermal hadron propagation in the early universe, and use this to derive analytical estimates for light-element production and in turn on decaying particle lifetimes and abundances. We then consider specifically the case of an unstable massive gravitino within the constrained minimal supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model (CMSSM). We present upper limits on its possible primordial abundance before decay for different possible gravitino masses, with CMSSM parameters along strips where the lightest neutralino provides all the astrophysical cold dark matter density. We do not find any CMSSM solution to the cosmological Li7 problem for small m3/2. Discounting this, for m1/2 ~ 500 GeV and tan beta = 10 the other light-element abundances impose an upper limit m3/2 n3/2/nγ < 3 × 10-12 GeV to < 2 × 10-13 GeV for m3/2 = 250 GeV to 1 TeV, which is similar in both the coannihilation and focus-point strips and somewhat weaker for tan beta = 50, particularly for larger m1/2. The constraints also weaken in general for larger m3/2, and for m3/2 > 3 TeV we find a narrow range of m3/2 n3/2/nγ, at values which increase with m3/2, where the Li7 abundance is marginally compatible with the other light-element abundances.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.