Big-bang nucleosynthesis enters the precision era

David N. Schramm and Michael S. Turner
Rev. Mod. Phys. 70, 303 – Published 1 January 1998
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Abstract

The last parameter of big-bang nucleosynthesis, the density of ordinary matter (baryons), is being pinned down by measurements of the deuterium abundance in high-redshift hydrogen clouds. When it is, the primeval abundances of the light elements D, 3He, 7Li, and 4He will be fixed. The first three will then become “tracers” in the study of Galactic and stellar chemical evolution. A precision determination of the 4He abundance will allow an important consistency test of big-bang nucleosynthesis and will sharpen nucleosynthesis as a probe of fundamental physics, e.g., the bound to the number of light neutrino species. An independent consistency test is on the horizon: a high-precision determination of the baryon density from measurements of the fluctuations of the cosmic background radiation temperature.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.70.303

    ©1998 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    David N. Schramm and Michael S. Turner

    • Departments of Physics and of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Enrico Fermi Institute, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637-1433
    • NASA/Fermilab Astrophysics Center, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, Illinois 60510-0500

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    Issue

    Vol. 70, Iss. 1 — January - March 1998

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