Primordial Helium And the Cosmic Background Radiation
Gary Steigman

TL;DR
This paper discusses how observations of primordial helium-4 and the cosmic microwave background can test the standard cosmological model and explore new physics, comparing data from WMAP and other sources.
Contribution
It provides an analysis of the primordial helium abundance derived from CMB data and compares it with BBN predictions and low-redshift observations, testing the consistency of cosmological models.
Findings
CMB data yields an indirect estimate of primordial helium abundance.
Current uncertainties prevent definitive conclusions about differences between predictions and observations.
Results are consistent with standard cosmology within uncertainties.
Abstract
The products of primordial nucleosynthesis and the cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons are relics from the early evolution of the Universe whose observations probe the standard model of cosmology and provide windows on new physics beyond the standard models of cosmology and of particle physics. In the standard, hot big bang cosmology, long before any stars have formed a significant fraction (~25%) of the baryonic mass in the Universe should be in the form of helium-4 nuclei. Since current 4He observations are restricted to low redshift regions where stellar nucleosynthesis has occurred, observations of high redshift, prestellar 4He would constitute a fundamental test of the hot, big bang cosmology. At recombination, long after big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) has ended, the temperature anisotropy spectrum imprinted on the CMB depends on the 4He abundance through its connection to…
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