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22 - Thermal equilibrium and the origin of baryon number

from Part IV - Inflation and the early Universe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

David H. Lyth
Affiliation:
Lancaster University
Andrew R. Liddle
Affiliation:
University of Sussex
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Summary

In this chapter we study thermal equilibrium in the early Universe. Then we look at possible mechanisms for the creation of baryon number (baryogenesis). We pay particular attention to baryogenesis mechanisms that directly involve a scalar field, because they offer the best chance of a primordial isocurvature perturbation.

Thermal equilibrium before the electroweak phase transition

In this section we show that electroweak symmetry is likely to be restored in the early Universe, with every particle of the Standard Model in thermal equilibrium.

Electroweak symmetry is restored if the temperature is bigger than a critical temperature TEW. The critical temperature is of order a few hundred GeV, the precise value depending on the parameters of the Standard Model, or an extension like the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM).

A particle species is in thermal equilibrium if the rate per particle for all relevant interactions exceeds the Hubble rate H. The dominant interactions are (i) decays and two-body scattering and (ii) the sphaleron transitions that violate B and L conservation. As we are interested in the case that electroweak symmetry is restored, particle masses vanish except for the masses of two Higgs particles which are roughly of order 100 GeV and hence less than the temperature. As a result, T is the only relevant dimensionful parameter.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Primordial Density Perturbation
Cosmology, Inflation and the Origin of Structure
, pp. 358 - 368
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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