Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) describes the formation of the lightest nucleiβhydrogen, helium, and trace amounts of lithiumβwithin the first few minutes after the Big Bang. During this epoch, the rapidly expanding universe cooled enough for protons and neutrons to combine, setting the primordial abundances that we observe today.
The key parameter governing these yields is the baryonβtoβphoton ratio Ξ·, which determines the density of nucleons available for fusion. A higher Ξ· leads to more efficient conversion of neutrons into heliumβ4, while a lower Ξ· leaves a larger fraction of deuterium and heliumβ3.
Observations of the cosmic microwave background and of metalβpoor astrophysical environments provide precise measurements of Ξ·, the effective number of neutrino species N_eff, and the neutron lifetime Ο_n. Comparing these data with BBN predictions tests the consistency of the standard cosmological model.
What is Big Bang Nucleosynthesis?
How does the baryon-to-photon ratio affect BBN?
What are the key elements formed during BBN?
Why is BBN important in cosmology?
What factors influence the primordial abundances in BBN?
How does BBN differ from stellar nucleosynthesis?
What are the current observations that support BBN?
Results are for informational purposes only and do not constitute professional advice.
