2,691 research outputs found
Cosmology and prospects for sub-MeV dark matter in electron recoil experiments
Dark matter is poorly constrained by direct detection experiments at masses
below 1 MeV. This is an important target for the next generation of
experiments, and several methods have been proposed to probe this mass range.
One class of such experiments will search for dark matter--electron recoils.
However, simplified models with new light degrees of freedom coupled to
electrons face significant pressure from cosmology, and the extent of these
restrictions more generally is poorly understood. Here, we perform a systematic
study of cosmological constraints on models with a heavy mediator in the
context of an effective field theory. We include constraints from (i)
disruption of primordial nucleosynthesis, (ii) overproduction of dark matter,
and (iii) the effective number of neutrino species at recombination. We
demonstrate the implications of our results for proposed electron recoil
experiments, and highlight scenarios which may be amenable to direct detection.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures. Matched published versio
Black hole remnants are not too fast to be dark matter
We comment on recent claims that recoil in the final stages of Hawking
evaporation gives black hole remnants large velocities, rendering them inviable
as a dark matter candidate. We point out that due to cosmic expansion, such
large velocities at the final stages of evaporation are not in tension with the
cold dark matter paradigm so long as they are attained at sufficiently early
times. In particular, the predicted recoil velocities are robustly compatible
with observations if the remnants form before the epoch of big bang
nucleosynthesis, a requirement which is already imposed by the physics of
nucleosynthesis itself.Comment: 1.5 pages + reference
Connecting direct and indirect detection with a dark spike in the cosmic-ray electron spectrum
Multiple space-borne cosmic ray detectors have detected line-like features in
the electron and positron spectra. Most recently, the DAMPE collaboration
reported the existence of such a feature at 1.4 TeV, sparking interest in a
potential dark matter origin. Such quasi-monochromatic features, virtually free
of any astrophysical background, could be explained by the annihilation of dark
matter particles in a nearby dark matter clump. Here, we explore the
consistency of producing such spectral features with dark matter annihilation
from the standpoint of dark matter substructure statistics, constraints from
anisotropy, and constraints from gamma-ray emission. We demonstrate that if
indeed a high-energy, line-like feature in the electron-positron spectrum
originates from dark matter annihilation in a nearby clump, a significant or
even dominant fraction of the dark matter in the Solar System likely stems from
the clump, with dramatic consequences for direct dark matter searches.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figure
Connecting direct and indirect detection with a dark spike in the cosmic-ray electron spectrum
Multiple space-borne cosmic ray detectors have detected line-like features in
the electron and positron spectra. Most recently, the DAMPE collaboration
reported the existence of such a feature at 1.4 TeV, sparking interest in a
potential dark matter origin. Such quasi-monochromatic features, virtually free
of any astrophysical background, could be explained by the annihilation of dark
matter particles in a nearby dark matter clump. Here, we explore the
consistency of producing such spectral features with dark matter annihilation
from the standpoint of dark matter substructure statistics, constraints from
anisotropy, and constraints from gamma-ray emission. We demonstrate that if
indeed a high-energy, line-like feature in the electron-positron spectrum
originates from dark matter annihilation in a nearby clump, a significant or
even dominant fraction of the dark matter in the Solar System likely stems from
the clump, with dramatic consequences for direct dark matter searches.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figure
Cosmological implications of the KOTO excess
The KOTO experiment has reported an excess of events
above the standard model prediction, in tension with the Grossman--Nir bound.
The GN bound heavily constrains new physics interpretations of an excess in
this channel, but another possibility is that the observed events originate
from a different process entirely: a decay of the form , where
denotes one or more new invisible species. We introduce a class of models
to study this scenario with two light scalars playing the role of , and we
examine the possibility that the lighter of the two new states may also account
for cosmological dark matter. We show that this species can be produced
thermally in the presence of additional interactions apart from those needed to
account for the KOTO excess. Conversely, in the minimal version of the model,
dark matter must be produced non-thermally. In this case, avoiding
overproduction imposes constraints on the structure of the low-energy theory.
Moreover, this requirement carries significant implications for the scale of
reheating in the early universe, generically preferring a low but
observationally-permitted reheating temperature of O(10 MeV). We discuss
astrophysical and terrestrial signatures that will allow further tests of this
paradigm in the coming years.Comment: 43 pages, 10 figure
The Maximal-Density Mass Function for Primordial Black Hole Dark Matter
The advent of gravitational wave astronomy has rekindled interest in
primordial black holes (PBH) as a dark matter candidate. As there are many
different observational probes of the PBH density across different masses,
constraints on PBH models are dependent on the functional form of the PBH mass
function. This complicates general statements about the mass functions allowed
by current data, and, in particular, about the maximum total density of PBH.
Numerical studies suggest that some forms of extended mass functions face
tighter constraints than monochromatic mass functions, but they do not preclude
the existence of a functional form for which constraints are relaxed. We use
analytical arguments to show that the mass function which maximizes the
fraction of the matter density in PBH subject to all constraints is a finite
linear combination of monochromatic mass functions. We explicitly compute the
maximum fraction of dark matter in PBH for different combinations of current
constraints, allowing for total freedom of the mass function. Our framework
elucidates the dependence of the maximum PBH density on the form of
observational constraints, and we discuss the implications of current and
future constraints for the viability of the PBH dark matter paradigm.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures. Matched published versio
Direct detection of primordial black hole relics as dark matter
If dark matter is composed of primordial black holes, such black holes can
span an enormous range of masses. A variety of observational constraints exist
on massive black holes, and black holes with masses below
are often assumed to have completely evaporated by the present day. But if the
evaporation process halts at the Planck scale, it would leave behind a stable
relic, and such objects could constitute the entirety of dark matter. Neutral
Planck-scale relics are effectively invisible to both astrophysical and direct
detection searches. However, we argue that such relics may typically carry
electric charge, making them visible to terrestrial detectors. We evaluate
constraints and detection prospects in detail, and show that if not already
ruled out by monopole searches, this scenario can be largely explored within
the next decade using existing or planned experimental equipment. A single
detection would have enormous implications for cosmology, black hole physics,
and quantum gravity.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figures. Matched published versio
Kinetic recoupling of dark matter
We study the possibility that dark matter re-enters kinetic equilibrium with
a radiation bath after kinetic decoupling, a scenario we dub kinetic
recoupling. This naturally occurs, for instance, with certain types of
resonantly-enhanced interactions, or as the result of a phase transition. While
late kinetic decoupling damps structure on small scales below a cutoff, kinetic
recoupling produces more complex changes in the power spectrum that depend on
the nature and extent of the recoupling period. We explore the features that
kinetic recoupling imprints upon the matter power spectrum, and discuss how
such features can be traced to dark matter microphysics with future
observations.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
UV physics from IR features: new prospects from top flavor violation
New physics in the rare top decays is currently very
weakly constrained. We show that in a large class of Standard Model extensions,
existing experimental constraints on new physics in flavor-conserving processes
imply strong indirect bounds on new physics contributions to flavor-violating
processes of the form . These indirect bounds arise from
basic principles of quantum field theory together with a few generic conditions
on the UV structure of the theory, and are roughly an order of magnitude
stronger than the present experimental bounds on the same processes. These
constraints provide a theoretically-motivated target for experimental searches
for : violation of these bounds would exclude a large
class of new physics models, and would provide nontrivial insight into the UV
behavior of the new physics.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
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