Limits on Non-Relativistic Matter During Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis
Abstract
Big-bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) probes the cosmic mass-energy density at temperatures 10 MeV to 100 keV. Here, we consider the effect of a cosmic matter-like species that is non-relativistic and pressureless during BBN. Such a component must decay; doing so during BBN can alter the baryon-to-photon ratio, η, and the effective number of neutrino species. We use light element abundances and the cosmic microwave background (CMB) constraints on η and N to place constraints on such a matter component. We find that electromagnetic decays heat the photons relative to neutrinos, and thus dilute the effective number of relativistic species to N eff < 3 for the case of three Standard Model neutrino species. Intriguingly, likelihood results based on Planck CMB data alone find N = 2.800 0.294, and when combined with standard BBN and the observations of D and 4 give N = 2.898 0.141. While both results are consistent with the Standard Model, we find that a nonzero abundance of electromagnetically decaying matter gives a better fit to these results. Our best-fit results are for a matter species that decays entirely electromagnetically with a lifetime τX = 0.89 \ sec and pre-decay density that is a fraction = (X/ rad)|10 \ MeV = 0.0026 of the radiation energy density at 10 MeV; similarly good fits are found over a range where τX1/2 is constant. On the other hand, decaying matter often spoils the BBN+CMB concordance, and we present limits in the (τX,) plane for both electromagnetic and invisible decays. For dark (invisible) decays, standard BBN (i.e. =0) supplies the best fit. We end with a brief discussion of the impact of future measurements including CMB-S4.
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