Primordial nucleosynthesis with varying fundamental constants: Degeneracies with cosmological parameters
C. J. A. P. Martins

TL;DR
This paper investigates how variations in fundamental constants, especially the fine-structure constant, affect primordial nucleosynthesis and the lithium problem, considering degeneracies with cosmological parameters and deriving constraints on such variations.
Contribution
It extends previous analyses by including cosmological parameter variations, confirming the preference for a larger fine-structure constant during nucleosynthesis, and establishing upper limits on its variation.
Findings
A larger fine-structure constant at nucleosynthesis is preferred even when considering parameter degeneracies.
Upper limits on the variation of the fine-structure constant are established as |Δα/α|<50 ppm without priors.
Varying fundamental constants remain a viable explanation for the lithium problem.
Abstract
The success of primordial nucleosynthesis as a cornerstone of the hot Big Bang model has been limited by the long-standing lithium problem. Recent work presented a self-consistent perturbative analysis of the effects of variations in nature's fundamental constants on primordial nucleosynthesis for a broad class of grand unified theory models, showing that such models provide a possible solution to the lithium problem, provided the value of the fine-structure constant at the nucleosynthesis epoch is larger than the current laboratory one by a few parts per million of relative variation. Here we extend the earlier analysis, focusing on how this preferred value of is affected if relevant cosmological parameters are also allowed to vary--specifically focusing on the baryon-to-photon ratio, the number of neutrinos, and the neutron lifetime. We rephrase the lithium problem…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Nuclear physics research studies · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
