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Particles in the Dark Universe

A Student’s Guide to Particle Physics and Cosmology

  • Book
  • © 2021

Overview

  • Describes cosmology, particle physics and astrophysics in a unique way, with unified notations and units of measure
  • Includes everything that is needed to compute any physical process
  • Treats all the steps, from inflation to dark matter detection, in a practical and independent way

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Table of contents (5 chapters)

  1. The Primordial Universe

  2. Modern Times [T CMB → T 0]

  3. Modern Times [T CMB → T 0]

Keywords

About this book

This book provides a comprehensive and instructive coverage of particle physics in the early universe, in a logical way. It starts from the thermal history of the universe by investigating some of the main arguments such as Big Bang nucleosynthesis, the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and the inflation, before treating in details the direct and indirect detection of dark matter and then some aspects of the physics of neutrino. Following, it describes possible candidates for dark matter and its interactions.

The book is targeted at theoretical physicists who deal with particle physics in the universe, dark matter detection and astrophysical constraints, and at particle physicists who are interested in models of inflation or reheating. This book offers also material for astrophysicists who work with quantum field theory computations.

All that is useful to compute any physical process is included: mathematical tables, all the needed functions for the thermodynamics of early universe and Feynman rules. In light of this, this book acts as a crossroad between astrophysics, particle physics and cosmology.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Laboratory of the Physics of the Two Infinities Irène Joliot-Curie (IJCLab) CNRS/University Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France

    Yann Mambrini

About the author

Yann Mambrini is Research Director at the French CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) in the Irene Joliot Curie Laboratory, at University Paris-Saclay. His research interests concern the field of particle physics and fundamental interactions. He works actively on extensions of the Standard Model, from Supergravity to Grand Unified Theories, and more specifically on their cosmological consequences, especially involving dark matter aspects. He was awarded with the Prix d'Excellence Scientifique of the National Research Council in 2010, 2014 and 2018. Currently, he is lecturing at Ecole Normal Supérieure. One of his passion is the concept of time, from its measurement to its nature, and the history of ideas in physics. He wrote several popular books on the subject: Histoires de Temps and Le Siècle des révolutions Scientifiques, Ed. Ellipses and Newton à la Plage, Ed. Dunod. He shares this passion with magic, with which he presents shows for the general public mixing illusions, time and mysteries of the universe.

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