CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+1 Primordial Black Holes and $r$-Process Nucleosynthesis.

jbm120 +1

+1 A Comparison of Maps and Power Spectra Determined from South Pole Telescope and Planck Data.

jbm120 +1

+1 Influence of Unobservable Modes on Correlation Functions during Inflation.

lxj154 +1

+1 Dynamics of dwarf galaxies disfavor stellar-mass black hole dark matter.

sxk1031 +1

-1 Testing backreaction effects with observtional with Hubble parameter data.

jbm120 -1

Showing votes from 2017-04-04 11:30 to 2017-04-07 12:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 19th, 10:30 am.

users

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astro-ph.CO

  • Primordial Black Holes and $r$-Process Nucleosynthesis.- [PDF] - [Article]

    George M. Fuller, Alexander Kusenko, Volodymyr Takhistov
     

    We show that some or all of the inventory of $r$-process nucleosynthesis can be produced in interactions of primordial black holes (PBHs) with neutron stars (NSs) if PBHs with masses ${10}^{-14}\,{\rm M}_\odot < {\rm M}_{\rm PBH} < {10}^{-8}\,{\rm M}_\odot$ make up a few percent or more of the dark matter. A PBH captured by a neutron star (NS) sinks to the center of the NS and consumes it from the inside. When this occurs in a rotating millisecond-period NS, the resulting spin-up ejects $\sim 0.1-0.5\,{\rm M}_{\odot}$ of relatively cold neutron-rich material. This ejection process and the accompanying decompression and decay of nuclear matter can produce electromagnetic transients, such as a kilonova-type afterglow and fast radio bursts. These transients are not accompanied by significant gravitational radiation or neutrinos, allowing such events to be differentiated from compact object mergers occurring within the distance sensitivity limits of gravitational wave observatories. The PBH-NS destruction scenario is consistent with pulsar and NS statistics, the dark matter content and spatial distributions in the Galaxy and Ultra Faint Dwarfs (UFD), as well as with the $r$-process content and evolution histories in these sites. Ejected matter is heated by beta decay, which leads to emission of positrons in an amount consistent with the observed 511-keV line from the Galactic Center.

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