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I'm currently studying from "Particle Astrophysics" by Perkins.
On page 132 it says:

After $kT$ fell below the strong quantum chromodynamics (QCD) scale parameter ∼ $200$ MeV, the remaining quarks, antiquarks, and gluons would no longer exist as separate components of a plasma but as quark bound states, forming the lighter hadrons such as pions and nucleons.

On page 148 it says:

In the early stages of the Big Bang, when the thermal energy per particle $kT$ was large compared with the hadron masses, it is expected that many types of hadrons, including protons and neutrons and their antiparticles, would have been in thermal equilibrium with radiation, being created and annihilated in reversible reactions such as $$p+\bar p \leftrightarrow \gamma+\gamma$$

The second quote implies $kT \gg 1$ GeV, but the top quote says that at this temperature there was a quark-gluon plasma.

What nuance am I missing?

Joshua
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    I don't know for sure, but note that the first quote doesn't say that hadrons don't exist above 1 GeV. It only says that unbound quarks don't exist below 1 GeV. Another thing to keep in mind is that the existence of the quark-gluon plasma phase depends on both temperature and density -- but that probably doesn't matter in this context, since in a cosmological model, the two parameters don't vary independently. –  Jun 24 '18 at 01:27
  • It doesn't say that, but the second paragraph leads into (non) conservation of baryon number and how initially baryon number could have been zero but changed over time. I guess the safest bet is to assume that for the hadrons that had already formed the baryon number was initially zero and to ignore the present plasma? – Joshua Jun 24 '18 at 10:37

2 Answers2

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Here is a phase diagram:

enter image description here

Fig. 1: The QCD phase diagram, with a hadron phase of ordinary nuclear matter and a quark gluon plasma phase. [At zero matter (baryon) density the phase transition is established to be a smooth crossover, current research searches for a first order transition and a critical point at finite density.]

It is not simple, and still under study.

This illustrates the first quote.

The second quote is a hypothesis within this model, that reversible processes allowed by quantum number conservation can occur even when temperatures are over the 200 MeV scale. This is logical considering that the average kT is a statistical number which describes uniquely the black body curve which has a variation in individual particle energy that will allow the overlap of baryons created and annihilated to exist in the mix. It is not one fixed value describing all possible interactions, these have to be studied individually.

anna v
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I think that in the 2nd paragraph, the proton and antiproton are original from the plasma after hadronization. enter image description here

Elena
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  • The 1st paragraph describes the phase from QGP to Hadronization, and the 2nd paragraph describes the process after hadronization emitting out. – Elena Jun 26 '18 at 06:49