Non-Extensive Statistics, New Solution to the Cosmological Lithium Problem
J.J. He, S.Q. Hou, A. Parikh, D. Kahl, C.A. Bertulani, other, collaborators

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel solution to the cosmological lithium problem by applying non-extensive Tsallis statistics to Big Bang nucleosynthesis, showing that slight deviations from classical velocity distributions can reconcile predicted and observed lithium abundances.
Contribution
It introduces the application of non-extensive Tsallis statistics to BBN, demonstrating that small deviations from Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution can resolve the lithium abundance discrepancy.
Findings
Predicted abundances of D, $^4$He, and $^7$Li match observations with non-extensive parameter q.
Nuclei velocities in the early universe deviate slightly from classical distributions.
A new solution to the lithium problem is found without new physics or theories.
Abstract
In the primordial Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN), only the lightest nuclides (D, He, He, and Li) were synthesized in appreciable quantities, and these relics provide us a unique window on the early universe. Currently, BBN simulations give acceptable agreement between theoretical and observed abundances of D and He, but it is still difficult to reconcile the predicted Li abundance with the observation for the Galactic halo stars. The BBN model overestimates the primordial Li abundance by about a factor of three, so called the cosmological lithium problem, a long-lasting pending issue in BBN. Great efforts have been paid in the past decades, however, the conventional nuclear physics seems unable to resolve such problem. It is well-known that the classical Maxwell-Boltzmann (MB) velocity distribution has been usually assumed for nuclei in the Big-Bang plasma. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStatistical Mechanics and Entropy · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques
