Bibcode
Rebolo, R.
Referencia bibliográfica
Nuclear Physics B Proceedings Supplements, Volume 110, p. 16-25.
Fecha de publicación:
7
2002
Número de citas
2
Número de citas referidas
2
Descripción
Recent determinatios of baryonic density using the angular power
spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background are very close to the
classical estimate from Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. This reinforces the
case for dark baryons in the Universe and for a large component of
exotic cold dark matter. Present-day baryons can be hidden in substellar
objects, stellar remnants, cold gas clouds, hot diffuse ionized gas in
various astrophysical environments. Direct detection searches and
microlensing experiments provide estimates of the Galactic mass budget
in massive compact objects concluding that the bulk of the dark matter
in the halo of the Galaxy cannot be associated to MACHOs. Baryons in
high redhshift Lyman-α systems can account for the cosmic baryonic
density. However, the dominant form of present-day baryons and, in
particular, the nature of the halo dark matter remains a mistery.