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Primordial black holes and the origin of the matter-antimatter asymmetry

García-Bellido, Juan

Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A: Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences, 2019-12, Vol.377 (2161), p.20190091-20190091 [Periódico revisado por pares]

England: The Royal Society Publishing

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  • Título:
    Primordial black holes and the origin of the matter-antimatter asymmetry
  • Autor: García-Bellido, Juan
  • É parte de: Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A: Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences, 2019-12, Vol.377 (2161), p.20190091-20190091
  • Notas: ObjectType-Article-1
    SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
    ObjectType-Feature-2
    content type line 23
    One contribution of 14 to a discussion meeting issue ‘Topological avatars of new physics’.
  • Descrição: We review here a new scenario of electroweak baryogenesis where the local energy released in the gravitational collapse to form primordial black holes (PBHs) at the quark-hadron (QCD) epoch drives over-the-barrier sphaleron transitions in a far from equilibrium environment with just the standard model CP violation. Baryons are efficiently produced in relativistic collisions around the black holes and soon redistribute to the rest of the universe, generating the observed matter-antimatter asymmetry well before primordial nucleosynthesis. Therefore, in this scenario there is a common origin of both the dark matter to baryon ratio and the photon to baryon ratio. Moreover, the sudden drop in radiation pressure of relativistic matter at / / decoupling, the QCD transition and annihilation enhances the probability of PBH formation, inducing a multi-modal broad mass distribution with characteristic peaks at 10 , 1, 30 and 10   , rapidly falling at smaller and larger masses, which may explain the LIGO-Virgo black hole mergers as well as the OGLE-GAIA microlensing events, while constituting all of the cold dark matter today. We predict the future detection of binary black hole (BBH) mergers in LIGO with masses between 1 and 5  , as well as above 80  , with very large mass ratios. Next generation gravitational wave and microlensing experiments will be able to test this scenario thoroughly. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Topological avatars of new physics'.
  • Editor: England: The Royal Society Publishing
  • Idioma: Inglês

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