Non-thermal processes in standard big bang nucleosynthesis: III. Reactions with slow nuclei and the overall effect
Victor T. Voronchev

TL;DR
This paper investigates how non-thermal nuclear processes involving slow and fast nuclei influence big bang nucleosynthesis, finding they slightly affect lithium predictions but do not resolve the lithium problem.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of non-Maxwellian particle effects on BBN, including new reaction pathways and their impact on element abundances.
Findings
Non-Maxwellian particles can slightly improve lithium abundance predictions.
These particles do not significantly alter the overall BBN predictions.
The study clarifies the limited role of non-thermal processes in solving the lithium problem.
Abstract
The present paper completes a series of our works on non-thermal nuclear processes in big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) started in JCAP05(2008)010 (Part I) and 05(2009)001 (Part II). The processes are triggered by non-Maxwellian particles naturally born in the main BBN reactions. Half of these reactions generate fast particles k^+ (= n,p,t,3He,alpha). The other half, being radiative capture processes, produce slow nuclei k^- (= d,t,3He,7Li,7Be) which can undergo (k^-,n) reactions with neutrons having large cross sections. The particle production rate R_k, thermalization time tau_k, and effective number density n_k are determined. It is shown that the values of n_k at the Universe temperatures T > 65 keV can exceed the number densities of Maxwellian 7Li and 7Be ions. To clarify the overall non-Maxwellian effect on BBN, both types of the non-Maxwellian particles are taken into account in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Neutrino Physics Research · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
