Big Bang Nucleosynthesis

 

The first elements were produced in the first three minutes after the Big Bang when the temperature was low enough to form deuterons from protons and neutrons. Standard Big Bang nucleosynthesis (SBBN) describes the formation of the lightest elements by a sequence of reactions (see Fig. 1) and predicts their abundances as a function of baryon density. Therefore, a comparison between the predictions and the observations of 2H, He, and 7Li abundances in old stellar objects allows to constrain the baryon to photon density η=nB/nγ [1] (see Fig. 2).

So far, only the abundances of 2H, 3He, 4He, and 7Li could be used because of the very small primordial yields of other light isotopes (6Li, 9Be, and 10,11B). Recently, however, it became possible to detect 6Li in metal-poor halo stars [2]. For the interpretation of these observations the 4He(d,γ)6Li reaction, which is responsible for the production of primordial 6Li has to be known with high accuracy. Therefore, the cross section of the 4He(d,γ)6Li reaction has been measured at GSI via the Coulomb dissociation method [3].  

Standard BBN predicts that only the lightest elements H, He, and Li can be synthesized. However, there are non-standard Big Bang models [4], which can bridge the mass gaps at A=5 and 8 thus leading to the synthesis of heavier nuclei. One possible reaction sequence is 7Li(n,γ)8Li(α,n)11B(n,γ)12B(β-,n)12C [5,6]. Subsequent neutron captures on 12C and 13C will then produce 14C, which has a half-life of 5730±40 yr. On the time scale of Big Bang nucleosynthesis 14C can be considered as stable and further proton, alpha, deuteron, and neutron capture reactions on 14C will result in the production of heavier nuclei (A>20). At GSI we investigated the 14C(n,γ)15C reaction with the Coulomb dissociation method.

 

References

 

[1] B.D. Fields and S. Sarkar, astro-ph/0601514, 2006

[2] M. Asplund et al., astro-ph/0510636, 2005

[3] F. Hammashe et al., Phys. Rev. C 82 (2010) 065803

[4] J. Applegate, C. Hogan, Phys. Rev. D 31 (1985) 3037

[5] J. Applegate, C. Hogan, R. Scherrer, Ap. j. 329 (1988) 527

[6] R. Malaney, W. Fowler, Ap. J. 333 (1988) 14

 


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