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  2. Baryogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryogenesis

    The Standard Model can incorporate baryogenesis, though the amount of net baryons (and leptons) thus created may not be sufficient to account for the present baryon asymmetry. There is a required one excess quark per billion quark-antiquark pairs in the early universe in order to provide all the observed matter in the universe. [3]

  3. Affleck–Dine mechanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affleck–Dine_mechanism

    The Affleck–Dine mechanism (AD mechanism) is a postulated mechanism for explaining baryogenesis during the primordial Universe immediately following the Big Bang.Thus, the AD mechanism may explain the asymmetry between matter and antimatter in the current Universe.

  4. Cosmological phase transition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_phase_transition

    Particle physics models which account for dark matter or which lead to successful baryogenesis may predict a strongly first-order electroweak phase transition. [20] The electroweak baryogenesis model may explain the baryon asymmetry in the universe, the observation that the amount of matter vastly exceeds the amount of matter. [4]

  5. Physical cosmology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_cosmology

    Physical cosmology is a branch of cosmology concerned with the study of cosmological models. A cosmological model, or simply cosmology, provides a description of the largest-scale structures and dynamics of the universe and allows study of fundamental questions about its origin, structure, evolution, and ultimate fate. [1]

  6. Quark epoch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark_epoch

    A visual representation of the division order of universal forces. In physical cosmology, the quark epoch was the period in the evolution of the early universe when the fundamental interactions of gravitation, electromagnetism, the strong interaction and the weak interaction had taken their present forms, but the temperature of the universe was still too high to allow quarks to bind together ...

  7. Baryon asymmetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baryon_asymmetry

    In physical cosmology, the baryon asymmetry problem, also known as the matter asymmetry problem or the matter–antimatter asymmetry problem, [1] [2] is the observed imbalance in baryonic matter (the type of matter experienced in everyday life) and antibaryonic matter in the observable universe.

  8. Glossary of astronomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_astronomy

    baryogenesis The process by which the class of subatomic particles known as baryons were generated in the early Universe, including the means by which baryons outnumber antibaryons. Big Bang The prevailing cosmological model for the origin of the observable universe. It depicts a starting condition of extremely high density and temperature ...

  9. Leptogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptogenesis

    Such non-conservation of baryon number is indeed assumed to have happened in the early universe, and is known as baryogenesis. However, in some theoretical models, it is suggested that leptogenesis also occurred prior to baryogenesis; thus the term leptogenesis is often used to imply the non-conservation of leptons without corresponding non ...