Primordial Black Holes, Hawking Radiation and the Early Universe
Preprint
- 27 March 2005
Abstract
The 511 keV gamma emission from the galactic core may originate from a high concentration ($\sim 10^{22}$) of primordial black holes (PBHs) in the core each of whose Hawking radiation includes $\sim 10^{21}$ positrons per second. The PBHs we consider are taken as near the lightest with longevity greater than the age of the universe (mass $\sim 10^{12}$ kg; Schwarzschild radius $\sim 1$ fm). These PBHs contribute only a small fraction of cold dark matter, $\Omega_{PBH} \sim 10^{-8}$. This speculative hypothesis, if confirmed implies the simultaneous discovery of Hawking radiation and an early universe phase transition.
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All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2005-03-27, ArXiv
- Published version: Modern Physics Letters A, 20 (21), 1573.
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