The 21-cm signal provides a novel avenue to measure the thermal state of the
universe during cosmic dawn and reionization (redshifts z∼5−30), and thus
to probe energy injection from decaying or annihilating dark matter (DM). These
DM processes are inherently inhomogeneous: both decay and annihilation are
density dependent, and furthermore the fraction of injected energy that is
deposited at each point depends on the gas ionization and density, leading to
further anisotropies in absorption and propagation. In this work, we develop a
new framework for modeling the impact of spatially inhomogeneous energy
injection and deposition during cosmic dawn, accounting for ionization and
baryon density dependence, as well as the attenuation of propagating photons.
We showcase how this first completely inhomogeneous treatment affects the
predicted 21-cm power spectrum in the presence of exotic sources of energy
injection, and forecast the constraints that upcoming HERA measurements of the
21-cm power spectrum will set on DM decays to photons and to electron/positron
pairs. These projected constraints considerably surpass those derived from CMB
and Lyman-α measurements, and for decays to electron/positron pairs they
exceed all existing constraints in the sub-GeV mass range, reaching lifetimes
of ∼1028s. Our analysis demonstrates the unprecedented
sensitivity of 21-cm cosmology to exotic sources of energy injection during the
cosmic dark ages. Our code, DM21cm, includes all these effects and
is publicly available in an accompanying release.Comment: 33 pages, 22 figures, public code at
https://github.com/yitiansun/DM21c