Super-weakly interacting massive particles produced in the late decays of
weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) are generic in large regions of
supersymmetric parameter space and other frameworks for physics beyond the
standard model. If their masses are similar to that of the decaying WIMP, then
they could naturally account for all of the cosmological dark matter abundance.
Their astrophysical consequences and collider signatures are distinct and
different from WIMP candidates. In particular, they could modify Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis, distort the Cosmic Microwave Background, reduce galactic
substructure and lower central densities of low-mass galaxies.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, white paper for Snowmass 201