Journal of High Energy Physics (Feb 2020)

Big Bang Nucleosynthesis hunts chameleon dark matter

  • Hua Chen,
  • Taishi Katsuragawa,
  • Shinya Matsuzaki,
  • Taotao Qiu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP02(2020)155
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2020, no. 2
pp. 1 – 29

Abstract

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Abstract We study the chameleon field dark matter, dubbed scalaron, in F (R) gravity in the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) epoch. With an R 2-correction term required to solve the singularity problem for F (R) gravity, we first find that the scalaron dynamics is governed by the R 2 term and the chameleon mechanism in the early universe, which makes the scalaron physics model-independent regarding the low-energy scale modification. In viable F (R) dark energy models including the R 2 correction, our analysis suggests the scalaron universally evolves in a way with a bouncing oscillation irrespective of the low-energy modification for the late-time cosmic acceleration. Consequently, we find a universal bound on the scalaron mass in the BBN epoch, to be reflected on the constraint for the coupling strength of the R 2 term, which turns out to be more stringent than the one coming from the fifth force experiments. It is then shown that the scalaron naturally develops a small enough fluctuation in the BBN epoch, hence can avoid the current BBN constraint placed by the latest Planck 2018 data, and can also have a large enough sensitivity to be hunted by the BBN, with more accurate measurements for light element abundances as well as the baryon number density fraction.

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