Cosmological variation of deuteron binding energy, strong interaction and quark masses from big bang nucleosynthesis

Abstract

We use Big Bang Nucleosynthesis calculations and light element abundance data to constrain the relative variation of the deuteron binding energy since the universe was a few minutes old, δ Q = Q(BBN)-Q(present). Two approaches are used, first treating the baryon to photon ratio, η, as a free parameter, but with the additional freedom of varying δ Q, and second using the WMAP value of η and solving only for δ Q. Including varying Q yields a better fit to the observational data than imposing the present day value, rectifying the discrepancy between the 4He abundance and the deuterium and 7Li abundances, and yields good agreement with the independently determined ηWMAP. The minimal deviation consistent with the data is significant at about the 4-σ level; δ Q/Q= -0.019 0.005. If the primordial 4He abundance lies towards the low end of values in the literature, this deviation is even larger and more statistically significant. Taking the light element abundance data at face-value, our result may be interpreted as variation of the dimensionless ratio X=ms/QCD of the strange quark mass and strong scale: δ X/X=(1.1 0.3) × 10-3. These results provide a strong motivation for a more thorough exploration of the potential systematic errors in the light element abundance data.

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