- Leptogenesis (physics)
In the strict sense, leptogenesis is a process which creates
lepton s. Theories of leptogenesis try to explain how the Universe changed from a state with no leptons just after theBig Bang to a state containing many leptons (mostlyelectron s) today.The equivalent problem for
baryon s is calledbaryogenesis . While there are no observational bounds on the relative number of leptons and anti-leptons, since leptons can be converted toneutrinos or anti-neutrinos and remain invisible, there is observed a significant imbalance in the number of baryons and anti-baryons.It should be understood however that it is not possible to create only electrons (or only protons) without violating the conservation of the electric charge. In other words, the conservation of the electric charge requires an equal number of electrons and protons.
Baryogenesis and leptogenesis are also connected by a phenomenon that happens in the currently accepted model for the elementary interactions, the
Standard Model . Indeed, certain (non-perturbative) configurations of gauge fields that are calledsphaleron s can convert leptons into baryons and "vice versa". This means that the standard model is in principle able to provide a mechanism to create baryons and leptons, realizing a speculative possibility suggested by A. Sakharov in the sixties. The simplest version of the standard model, however, is quantitatively unable to realize this possibility.A simple modification of the standard model that is instead able to realize the program of Sakharov is the one suggested by Fukugita and Yanagida. The standard model is augmented by adding right handed neutrinos, permitting implementation of the see-saw mechanism and providing the neutrinos with mass. At the same time, the augmented model is able to spontaneously generate leptons from the decays of right handed neutrinos. Finally, the sphalerons are able to convert the spontaneously generated lepton asymmetry into the observed baryonic asymmetry. Often, by an extension terms, the physicists use the word leptogenesis to denote the mechanism here described.
See also
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Baryogenesis
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