Cosmic Stasis from Primordial-Black-Hole Evaporation and Its Phenomenological Implications

23 Sept 2023, 19:20
20m
Tsung-Dao Lee Institute/N6F-N600 - Lecture Room (Tsung-Dao Lee Institute)

Tsung-Dao Lee Institute/N6F-N600 - Lecture Room

Tsung-Dao Lee Institute

40

Speaker

Fei Huang (Weizmann Institute of Science)

Description

Cosmic stasis is a phenomenon in which the abundances of multiple cosmological energy components — components such as matter, radiation, or vacuum energy — remain effectively constant despite the expansion of the universe. One mechanism which can give rise to an extended period of cosmic stasis is the evaporation of a population of primordial black holes (PBHs). In this talk, I review how PBH evaporation can lead to a stasis epoch and examine the observational consequences of such a modification to the cosmic expansion history. These include implications for inflationary observables, for the stochastic gravitational-wave background, and for the production of dark matter and dark radiation.

Primary author

Fei Huang (Weizmann Institute of Science)

Co-authors

Prof. Brooks Thomas (Lafayette College) Dr Doojin Kim (Texas A&M University) Prof. Keith Dienes (University of Arizona) Dr Lucien Heurtier (Durham University) Prof. Tim Tait (University of California, Irvine)

Presentation materials