Biased discrete symmetry breaking and Fermi balls
Abstract
The spontaneous breaking of an approximate discrete symmetry is considered, with the resulting protodomains of true and false vacuum being separated by domain walls. Given a strong, symmetric Yukawa coupling of the real scalar field to a generic fermion, the domain walls accumulate a gas of fermions, which modify the domain wall dynamics. The splitting of the degeneracy of the ground states results in the false vacuum protodomain structures eventually being fragmented into tiny false vacuum bags with a Fermi gas shell (Fermi balls), that may be cosmologically stable due to the Fermi gas pressure and wall curvature forces, acting on the domain walls. As fermions inhabiting the domain walls do not undergo number density freeze out, stable Fermi balls exist only if a fermion anti-fermion asymmetry occurs. Fermi balls formed with a new Dirac fermion that possesses no standard model gauge charges provide a novel cold dark matter candidate.
- Publication:
-
Physics Letters B
- Pub Date:
- February 1995
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0370-2693(95)00080-5
- arXiv:
- arXiv:hep-ph/9408387
- Bibcode:
- 1995PhLB..347..205M
- Keywords:
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- High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
- E-Print:
- 10 pages, uuencoded file containing standard LaTeX and 1 PostScript figure, Albberta Thy-1-94