4.6 Article

Lines in the cosmic microwave background spectrum from the epoch of cosmological helium recombination

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 485, Issue 2, Pages 377-393

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20078993

Keywords

atomic processes; cosmology : cosmic microwave background; cosmology : theory; cosmology : early Universe

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The main goal of this work is to calculate the contributions of bound-bound transitions of helium to the cosmological recombination spectrum. We show that helium in the early Universe causes unique features to appear in the total cosmological recombination spectrum. These may provide a unique observational possibility to determine the relative abundance of primordial helium, well before the formation of first stars. We include the effect of the tiny fraction of neutral hydrogen atoms on the dynamics of He II. He I recombination at redshifts z similar to 2500. As discussed recently, this process significantly accelerates He II. He I recombination, resulting in rather narrow and distinct features in the associated recombination spectrum. In addition this process induces some emission within the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line, before the actual epoch of hydrogen recombination around z similar to 1100-1500. We also show that some of the fine-structure transitions of neutral helium appear in absorption, again leaving unique traces in the cosmic microwave background blackbody spectrum, which may allow confirmation of our understanding of the early Universe and of detailed atomic physics.

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