Primordial nucleosynthesis with varying fundamental constants: Solutions to the Lithium problem and the Deuterium discrepancy
M. Deal, C. J. A. P. Martins

TL;DR
This paper investigates the Lithium problem and Deuterium discrepancy in primordial nucleosynthesis, suggesting astrophysical processes can resolve Lithium issues and potential variations in fundamental constants may explain Deuterium anomalies.
Contribution
It provides a self-consistent analysis of how variations in fundamental constants and stellar processes can address longstanding nucleosynthesis problems.
Findings
Transport processes in stars can account for Lithium depletion.
A slight increase in the fine-structure constant fits observational data.
Deuterium discrepancy may indicate new physics.
Abstract
The success of primordial nucleosynthesis has been limited by the long-standing Lithium problem. We use a self-consistent perturbative analysis of the effects of relevant theoretical parameters on primordial nucleosynthesis, including variations of nature's fundamental constants, to explore the problem and its possible solutions, in the context of the latest observations and theoretical modeling. We quantify the amount of depletion needed to solve the Lithium problem, and show that transport processes of chemical elements in stars are able to account for it. Specifically, the combination of atomic diffusion, rotation and penetrative convection allows us to reproduce the lithium surface abundances of Population II stars, starting from the primordial Lithium abundance. We also show that even with this depletion factor there is a preference for a value of the fine-structure constant at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science
