Big Bang nucleosynthesis and physics beyond the Standard Model

ArXiv hep-ph/9602260 (1996)

Abstract:

The Hubble expansion of galaxies, the $2.73\dK$ blackbody radiation background and the cosmic abundances of the light elements argue for a hot, dense origin of the universe --- the standard Big Bang cosmology --- and enable its evolution to be traced back fairly reliably to the nucleosynthesis era when the temperature was of $\Or(1)$ MeV corresponding to an expansion age of $\Or(1)$ sec. All particles, known and hypothetical, would have been created at higher temperatures in the early universe and analyses of their possible effects on the abundances of the synthesized elements enable many interesting constraints to be obtained on particle properties. These arguments have usefully complemented laboratory experiments in guiding attempts to extend physics beyond the Standard $SU(3)_{\c}{\otimes}SU(2)_{\L}{\otimes}U(1)_{Y}$ Model, incorporating ideas such as supersymmetry, compositeness and unification. We first present a pedagogical account of relativistic cosmology and primordial nucleosynthesis, discussing both theoretical and observational aspects, and then proceed to examine such constraints in detail, in particular those pertaining to new massless particles and massive unstable particles. Finally, in a section aimed at particle physicists, we illustrate applications of such constraints to models of new physics.

Big Bang nucleosynthesis and physics beyond the Standard Model

(1996)

A Supersymmetric Resolution of the KARMEN Anomaly

(1995)

Authors:

Debajyoti Choudhury, Subir Sarkar

Successful Supersymmetric Inflation

ArXiv hep-ph/9510369 (1995)

Abstract:

The temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background observed by COBE provide strong support for an inflationary phase in the early universe, below the GUT scale. We argue that a singlet field in a hidden sector of an effective supergravity theory yields the required inflationary potential without fine tuning. Reheating occurs to a temperature low enough to avoid the gravitino problem, but high enough to allow subsequent baryogenesis. Two observational consequences are that gravitational waves contribute negligibly to the microwave background anisotropy, and the spectrum of scalar density perturbations is `tilted', improving the fit to large-scale structure in an universe dominated by cold dark matter.

Successful Supersymmetric Inflation

(1995)