Kinetic theory of neutrinos and nuclei in the 'early' universe

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

We wish to use astronomical observations of the early universe at high precision as an extraterrestrial laboratory to study an array of fundamental and applied questions in nuclear and particle physics. Suppose, for example, we want to constrain a particular beyond-standard model scenario that might affect the amounts of light elements created in the Big Bang. Here, as in other scenarios we might consider, we are faced with solving two challenging, tightly coupled problems. That of the non-equilibrium evolution of the neutrino distributions in energy and flavor and, second, determining the nuclear abundances, which depend sensitively on weak interactions with neutrinos, by solving a stiff nuclear reaction network. We overview work on this topic, highlighting recent advances in our understanding of neutrino flavor evolution in the presence of their collisions with each other and matter in the early universe. We demonstrate, by concurrent solution of the neutrino and matter plasma evolution, percent-level effects on predicted deuterium abundances due to non-equilibrium distortions of the neutrino spectra, an order of magnitude larger than previous estimates. Preliminary results for coherent neutrino flavor evolution in the presence of collisions are also discussed.

*EG acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation, Grant PHY-1630782, and the Heising-Simons Foundation, Grant 2017-228. Research of DB, VC and MP was supported by the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) through LANL’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) and the LANL Center for Space and Earth Science (CSES). GF and LJ was supported by NSF Grants No. PHY- 1307372 and No. PHY-1614864 at UC San Diego.

Presenters

  • Mark W Paris

    • Los Alamos National Lab

Authors

  • Evan Grohs

    • Los Alamos National Lab, UC Berkeley
  • Daniel Blaschke

    • Los Alamos National Lab
  • Vincenzo Cirigliano

    • Los Alamos National Lab
  • George Fuller

    • UC San Diego
  • Lucas Johns

    • UC San Diego
  • Chad Kishimoto

    • University of San Diego
  • Mark W Paris

    • Los Alamos National Lab
  • Shashank Shalgar

    • Los Alamos National Lab, Neils Bohr Institute