Asymmetric dark matter (ADM) is motivated by the similar cosmological mass
densities measured for ordinary and dark matter. We present a comprehensive
theory for ADM that addresses the mass density similarity, going beyond the
usual ADM explanations of similar number densities. It features an explicit
matter-antimatter asymmetry generation mechanism, has one fully worked out
thermal history and suggestions for other possibilities, and meets all
phenomenological, cosmological and astrophysical constraints. Importantly, it
incorporates a deep reason for why the dark matter mass scale is related to the
proton mass, a key consideration in ADM models. Our starting point is the idea
of mirror matter, which offers an explanation for dark matter by duplicating
the standard model with a dark sector related by a Z2 parity symmetry.
However, the dark sector need not manifest as a symmetric copy of the standard
model in the present day. By utilising the mechanism of "asymmetric symmetry
breaking" with two Higgs doublets in each sector, we develop a model of ADM
where the mirror symmetry is spontaneously broken, leading to an electroweak
scale in the dark sector that is significantly larger than that of the visible
sector. The weak sensitivity of the ordinary and dark QCD confinement scales to
their respective electroweak scales leads to the necessary connection between
the dark matter and proton masses. The dark matter is composed of either dark
neutrons or a mixture of dark neutrons and metastable dark hydrogen atoms.
Lepton asymmetries are generated by the CP-violating decays of heavy Majorana
neutrinos in both sectors. These are then converted by sphaleron processes to
produce the observed ratio of visible to dark matter in the universe. The
dynamics responsible for the kinetic decoupling of the two sectors emerges as
an important issue that we only partially solve.Comment: 45 pages, 11 figures. Matches published versio