Measurement of the primordial helium abundance from the intergalactic medium
Ryan Cooke (1), Michele Fumagalli (1,2) ((1) Centre for Extragalactic, Astronomy, Durham University, (2) Institute for Computational Cosmology,, Durham University)

TL;DR
This study measures the primordial helium abundance using a near-pristine intergalactic gas cloud observed in absorption, providing an independent check that aligns with the Standard Model prediction and has potential for future precision improvements.
Contribution
First measurement of primordial helium abundance from intergalactic gas absorption, offering an independent method to test Big Bang Nucleosynthesis beyond galaxy-based techniques.
Findings
Helium abundance Y = 0.250^{+0.033}_{-0.025} from intergalactic gas
Result consistent with Standard Model value Y_P = 0.24672
Method shows potential for future precision tests of cosmology
Abstract
Almost every helium atom in the Universe was created just a few minutes after the Big Bang through a process commonly referred to as Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. The amount of helium that was made during Big Bang Nucleosynthesis is determined by the combination of particle physics and cosmology. The current leading measures of the primordial helium abundance (Y_P) are based on the relative strengths of H I and He I emission lines emanating from star-forming regions in local metal-poor galaxies. As the statistical errors on these measurements improve, it is essential to test for systematics by developing independent techniques. Here we report the first determination of the primordial helium abundance based on a near-pristine intergalactic gas cloud that is seen in absorption against the light of a background quasar. This gas cloud, observed when the Universe was just one-third of its…
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