Evolutionary and structural properties of mirror star MACHOs |
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Authors: | Zurab Berezhiani Paolo Ciarcelluti Santi Cassisi Adriano Pietrinferni |
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Affiliation: | aDipartimento di Fisica, Università di L’Aquila, 67010 Coppito, AQ and INFN, Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, 67010 Assergi, AQ, Italy bINAF, Osservatorio Astronomico di Collurania, 64100 Teramo, Italy |
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Abstract: | There can exist a hidden sector of the Universe in the form of parallel “mirror” world which has the same particle physics as the observable world and interacts with the latter only gravitationally. Big Bang nucleosynthesis bounds demand that the mirror sector should have a smaller temperature than the ordinary one. This implies that the mirror matter could play a role of dark matter, and in addition its chemical content should be dominated by helium. Here we study the evolutionary and structural properties of the mirror stars which essentially are similar to that of the ordinary stars but with higher helium contents. Being invisible in terms of photons, they could be observed only as MACHOs in the microlensing experiments. Using a numerical code, we compute evolution of stars with large helium abundances (Y = 0.30–0.80) and a wide range of masses, from 0.5 to 10 M. We found that helium dominated mirror star should have much faster evolutionary time (up to a factor 30) than the ordinary star with the same mass. In addition, we show the diagrams of luminosities, effective temperatures, central temperatures and densities, and compute the masses of the He-core at ignition and the minimum mass for carbon ignition, for different chemical compositions. The general conclusion is that mirror stars evolve faster as compared to ordinary ones, and explode earlier as type II supernovae, thus enriching the galactic halo of processed mirror gas with higher metallicity, with implications for MACHO observations and galaxy evolution. |
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Keywords: | Dark matter Galactic halo Gravitational lensing Stellar evolution |
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