1. Introduction
Formation of antimatter domains in baryon asymmetrical Universe can take place in several cosmological scenarios with nonhomogeneous baryosynthesis. Successive evolution of such domains depends on antibaryon density within them and on effects of baryon-antibaryon annihilation with the surrounding matter [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12]. The interaction of antimatter from antimatter domains with matter in the surrounding medium is studied to determine the boundary conditions also in the case of the non-disappearance of the antimatter domains in the limiting processes.
As a consequence, new classifications for the antimatter domains are set.
The implied differences are to be analyzed within the framework of the relativistic processes chosen, the nucleosynthesis processes occurring, the comparison with the existing experimental data, as implied from the confrontation within the Standard Cosmological Principle.
Space-time evolution of antimatter domains is studied after the analytical integration of the differential equation for the number of baryons, and the two-point correlation functions are analytically integrated within the nucleon-antinucleon boundary interactions.
A dependence on the Relativistic densities and on the effective antibaryon-antibaryon distances is rendered as effective in the schematization of a lattice for the definition of first neighbours and second neighbours. A description of the phenomenon as a function of the diffusion length for the radiation-dominated epoch is described to be also appropriate. The results can be compared with the implications of a Relativistic Mean Field Theory and its low-energy limit implications.
Antibaryon-baryon interactions are studied within the definition of the boundary interaction of the antimatter domains.
The space-time evolution of antimatter domains is analyzed after the analytical solution of the equation for the number of antibaryons after the definition of the diffusion coefficient as a function of the (integrated) Thomson cross section for different antimatter space-time statistical distributions, and the width of the spherical shell of the antimatter-domain boundary is further classified.
Two-point correlation functions are analytically integrated in the case of a Minkowsky-flat background under the hypothesis of isotropy and homogeneity in the case of two antimatter domains in the case of a trivial estimator; the two-point correlation functions if further analytically integrated for the choice of the Davies-Peebles estimators; the implications of the Hamilton estimators are discussed.
The implications of the models are compared with those of the study of the condition for the survival of ifferent celestial objects, such as dm clumps, and, in particular, of neutralino clumps; the limiting processes are analyzed.
2. Methods: Introductory Statements
2.1. Time Evolution of Antimatter Domains
The time evolution of antimatter domains can be studied through the baryon/photon ratio
s
which obeys the differential equations
where
is the diffusion coefficient, and with the initial-data conditions
to compute the geodesics coordinate distance run across by atoms after the recombination age until the present time
within a suitable photon thermalization processThe number of antibaryons in the boundary spherical shell in which the antibaryon-baryon interaction takes place is determined as
with
radius of the spherical antimatter domain For the evaluation of the number density of antiprotons, by taking into account both the annihilation processes and the expansion of the Universe, the study is performed at a temperature
T,
; for low-density antimatter domains, the density of antimatter within a domain is 3 orders of magnitude less than the baryon density.
The study of the interaction is accomplished as its cross section does not depend on the temperature if below and implies the antideuterium production in the reaction only if the reaction rate exceeds the expansion rate of the Universe; the (integrated) Thomson cross section is therefore studied through the diffusion coefficient . Analytical solution of the equation for the number density of antiprotons as a function of annihilation and expansion of the Universe is here found.
Antibaryons within the domain can be schematized as a ling on the point of a lattice of edges of length : the picture is compatible with the scenario of an expanding Universe as soon as the antinucleon-antinuclei interactions are expressed as a function of the (Relativistic) volume densities.
The results can also be expressed as a function of the diffusion length for times ranging within the radiation-dominated epoch, or free streaming after the recombination epoch.
2.2. Antimatter Space-Time Statistical Distributions
It is possible to evaluate the (Relativistic) density of the antimatter domains by evaluating the number of antibaryons contained in the antimatter domains: to do so, it is necessary to individuate a suitable antimatter space-time statistical distribution obeyed by the antibaryons on the relativistic background. In the case of low-density antimatter domains, several antimatter space-time statistical distributions are possible to be evaluated: the case of a Bernoulli distribution, the case of a Binomial distribution, the case of a Poisson distribution, the case of a matter/antimatter symmetric Universe, the case a a Gaussian distribution, the case of a two-parameter Gauss minus distribution, the case of a Fishe’s modified non-central hypergeometric distribution, the case of a Wallenius’ non-central modified hypergeometric distribution, the case of a generalized modified non-central hypergeometric distribution; in the case of low-density antimatter domains, the different antimatter space-time statistical distributions are demonstrated not to converge to a Gaussian distribution. The results can be nevertheless compared through the Heinrich theorem, which, by means of linear mapping and (in the appreciated case) auxiliary parameters, which redistribute the (standard) errors and allow one to compare the results also on non-trivial relativistic backgrounds.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Low-Density Antimatter Domains: Antinucleon-Nucleon Interactions
3.1.1. Antiproton-Proton Interaction
First-neighbours Antiproton-proton-interaction approximations and second-neighbours Antiproton-proton-interaction ones can allow for a classification of boundary interactions for low-density antimatter domains. First-neighbours interaction approximation at the boundary of the antimatter domain of mass M and radius holds in the case , , after which the condition for the antimatter domain not to disappear in the limiting process.S Second-neighbours antiproton-proton interactions approximations at the domain boundary hold in the case .
3.1.2. Antinucleus-Nucleon Interaction
First-neighbours antinucleus-interactions approximaions hold for antimatter domains
for the study of the boundary interactions, which approximation holds in the case
,
, for
A nucleus with
A nucleons, with
a dimensionfull function, depending on the antinucleon-antinucleon (centers distances on the lattice)
and on the (Relativistic) density
. For an antimatter domain consisting of antinuclei
of mass
, the total mass change is calculated as
at the boundary.
Second-neighbours antinucleons-nucleon interaction domains are categorized for boundary interactions when the following majorization holds
, for which the total mass change is evaluated as
3.2. Low-Density Antimatter Domain: Two-Point Correlation Functions
Two-point correlation functions for low-density antimatter domains,
and
, resp., of size
each, on (homogenous, isotropic) Minkowski-flat background, for which an timatter densities
follow a Poisson space-time statistical distribution are integrated by means of the estimator
as
with
the effective (time-dependent) phase function.
3.2.1. Low-Density Antimatter Domains: Davies-Peebles Estimator
The correlation function between an antimatter domain
and an antibaryon
by means of the Davies-Peebles statistical estimator is integrated as
It is crucial to remark that the time dependence is suppressed, and the time dependence is expressed after the ratio , i.e., on the different statistical antimatter space-time distributions and on their dependence on the Hubble-radius function , and on the effective (time-dependent) phase function .
3.2.2. Hamilton Estimator
The Hamilton statistical estimator takes into account the difference in distances among the Binomial distribution and the Poisson distribution.
3.3. Low-Density Antimatter Domains: Evaluation of the Number of Antinucleons after the Diffusion Equation
It is possible to evaluate the number of antinucleons
in the spherical shell within which the boundary interactions take place after the diffusion equation Equation (
2), which can be solved analytically for the different antimatter space-time statitical distributions. In the case of a Bernoulli space-time statistical distribution of antimatter, the number of the antinucleons interacting in the spherical shell is calculated after Equation (
2) as
In the case of a Poisson space-time statistical distribution of antimatter, the number of the antinucleons interacting in the spherical shell is calculated after Equation (
2) as
In the case of a Binomial space-time statistical distribution of antimatter, the number of the antinucleons interacting in the spherical shell is calculated after Equation (
2) as
In the case of a Gaussian space-time statistical distribution of antimatter, the number of the antinucleons interacting in the spherical shell is calculated after Equation (
2) as
after treating the number of baryons
as not changing with the number of antibaryons
, it is possible to evaluate the boundary of the antimatter domain as a spherical shell in which the baryon-antibaryon annihilation takes place as depending on whether the antibaryons in the low-density antimatter domains are not interacting, or interacting (as first-neighbours interaction or second-neighbours interactions), i.e. on the antibaryon-antibaryon interaction distances, on the mass of the baryons
, and on the mass of the antibaryons
.
4. Conclusions
Comparison with Dark Matter (DM) objects of different masses would allow one to register the differences in the survival of such objects of cosmological origin, according to the different (limiting) processes. Neutralino clumps of mass
are estimated to survive the Galaxy evolution if their mass is within the range
in [
13,
14]; further classifications of neutralino clumps also allow for further comparison with the case of antimattter domains [
15].
Analyses of the limiting processes of disappearence of the antimatter domains are possible, after [
16], and the characterization of the results follow [
17].
The space-time evolution of antimatter domains separated in a small angular distance can be further studied through the Rubin-Limber correlation functions for small angles [
18,
19].
The antinucleon interactions investigated within the framework of a fully-ionized plasma are to be compared with those achieved in a Relativistic Mean Field Theory [
20].
Further interactions examples can be therefore schematized.
We hope that the development of our approach and revealing of the observational signatures of antimatter domain structure in the baryon asymmetrical Universe would shed light on the origin of matter in the Universe, specifying the physical nature of the three Sakharov’s conditions in the context of physics beyond the Standard model.