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Published June 15, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Interacting light thermal-relic dark matter: Self-consistent cosmological bounds

Abstract

We analyze cosmic microwave background (CMB) data to constrain the mass and interaction strengths of thermally-produced dark matter (DM) in a self-consistent manner, simultaneously taking into account the cosmological effects of its mass and interactions. The presence of a light thermal-relic particle contributes non-negligibly to the radiation density during big bang nucleosynthesis (BBN), altering the light-element yields, as well as the effective number of relativistic particle species. On the other hand, DM interactions with the Standard Model can affect distribution of matter in later universe. Both mass and interactions alter CMB anisotropy on subdegree scales. To understand and quantify the interplay of these effects, we consider elastic DM-baryon scattering with a momentum-transfer cross section that scales as a power law of the relative velocity between the scattering particles. In the range of thermal-relic DM masses relevant for BBN (≲20  MeV), we find that the reconstruction of the DM mass and the scattering cross section from the CMB data features strong degeneracies; modeling the two effects simultaneously increases the sensitivity of the CMB measurements to both fundamental properties of DM. Additionally, we study the effects of late-time residual annihilation of a light thermal relic and provide improved CMB constraints on the DM mass and annihilation cross section. To examine degeneracy between DM mass, cross section for elastic scattering with baryons, and annihilation cross section, we consider a specific case of DM with electric and magnetic dipole moments. We present new self-consistent cosmological bounds for this model and discuss implications for future searches.

Copyright and License

© 2024 American Physical Society.

Acknowledgement

V. G. and R. A. acknowledge the support from NASA through the Astrophysics Theory Program, Award No. 21-ATP21-0135. V. G. acknowledges the support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Grant No. PHY-2239205, and from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement under the Cottrell Scholar Program. K. B. acknowledges support from the NSF under Grant No. PHY-2112884. K. B. and V. G. gratefully acknowledge support from the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics at Stony Brook University, where part of the research for this paper was performed during the “Lighting New Lampposts for Dark Matter and Beyond the Standard Model” workshop.

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Additional details

Created:
June 12, 2024
Modified:
June 12, 2024