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Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

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Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005
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Page 1: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Non-minimal cold dark matter particles

Marc Kamionkowski

Caltech

Bonn29 Aug 2005

Page 2: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Plan

• Review of standard weakly interacting massive particle scenario

• (Possible) problems with CDM on small scales• Self-interacting dark matter• WIMPs from charged-particle decay (Sigurdson,

MK; Sigurdson, Caldwell, Doran, Kurylov, MK)

• “How dark is `dark’?” Dark-matter dipole moments

Page 3: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

What do we know?

• Compelling cosmological evidence that nonbaryonic (non SM) dark matter exists.

• .

• Dark matter must be ‘dark’ matter.

• But empirically, know little else….

Page 4: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Good news: cosmologists don't need to "invent" new

particle:• Weakly Interacting

Massive Particles (WIMPS). e.g.,neutralinos

• Axions

ma~10-(3-6) eV

arises in Peccei-Quinn

solution to strong-CP

problem

v

cmhχ

sec/103 3272 ×≈Ω(e.g., Jungman, MK, Griest 1996)

(e.g., Raffelt 1990; Turner 1990)

Page 5: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

WIMPsWIMPsRelic Density: Ωχh2≈( 3x10-26 cm3/sec / χχsm)

vh

13272 scm103⋅≈Ω

v Annihilation cross section χχsm of Weak Interaction strength gives right answer

Prospects for detection:

Detection

direct

indirect

Neutrinosfrom sun/earth

anomalouscosmic rays

WIMP candidate motivated by SUSY:Lightest Neutralino, LSP in MSSM

Page 6: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Typical WIMP-WIMP elastic scatteringcross section ~10-40 cm2 and mass10-1000 GeV; for halo density ~GeV/cm3 and velocity ~300 km/sec, mean-free timefor WIMP scattering is at least 1013/H

0;

thus, WIMPs act as collision-freedark matter.

Axion-axion cross section far smaller,so also collisionless.

Page 7: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Problem 1: Halo cusps

N-body simulations show "cusp", 1r, for small r for collisionless halos (Navarro, Frenk, White 1996; Moore et al. 1997); however, rotation curves for (at least some, maybe most) galaxies show dark-matter cores.

Page 8: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Problem 2: Halo substructure

N-body simulations show more than 10 times as many dwarf galaxies in typical galactic halo than are observed in Milky Way (Moore et al. 1999; Klypin et al. 1999)

Page 9: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Cluster

galactic halo

300 kpc

Page 10: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

The self-interacting dark matter solution (Spergel & Steinhardt 1999):

Hypothesize that dark matter can elastically scatter from itself

Small self-interaction leads to energy transport that reduces sharp subgalactic features like cusp and substructure.

Requires X-sections ~13 OoM bigger than WIMP

Now ruled out by lensing, dynamics, and x-ray observations of elliptical galaxies.

Page 11: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Lesson from SIDM

Clever observations and argumentscan constrain interactions of dark-matterparticles

Page 12: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Another possible resolution: Power suppression on small scales from

inflation with broken scale invarianceMK&Liddle, PRL 84, 4525 (2000)

Yokoyama, PRD, 2000I

V(V())

Inflaton

Page 13: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

ad hocBSI

Page 14: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

WIMPs from Charged-Particle Decay

(Sigurdson & MK, PRL 2004)

Charged particles: couple to baryon-photon fluid, have pressure, so growth of structure suppressed.Growth of modes that enter horizon while dark matter is charged is suppressed

If charged particle has lifetime ~3.5 yr, power on <Mpc suppressed

Page 15: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Effect of Charged NLDP?

k= 30 Mpc-1 3 Mpc-1 0.3 Mpc-1

Dark Matter (Standard Case)Dark Matter (w/Charged NLDP)

Charged Matter (Baryons+NLDP)

Page 16: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

K. Sigurdson and MK Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 171302 (2004) [astro-ph/0311486]

f = fraction of DM that is initially charged

If

Page 17: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Small Scale Structure Problem

• Can solve this problem with charged-decay for lifetimes of order years.

• Long lifetime. Weak coupling?

• Measurements of small-scale P(k) can lead to cosmologically interesting lifetimes.

SuperWIMPSJ. Feng et al. (2003)

Page 18: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Suppression by a factor in the linear power spectrum.

Can charged-particle decay mimicRunning of spectral index?

(Profumo, Sigurdson, Ullio, MK, PRD 2005, astro-ph/0410714)

Page 19: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

21-cm Fluctuations

• Measurement of linear-regime P(k) with 21-cm spin-flip transition during the “Cosmic Dark Ages”, at redshifts z=30-200 may discriminate between running of spectral index, and charged-particle decay

Page 20: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

How Dark is “Dark”? How weak must coupling of DM to photon

be? • Charge? No.

A. Gould et al. (1990)

• Millicharge? S. L. Dubovsky et al. (2004)S. Davidson et al. (2000)

• What about a neutral particle with magnetic or electric dipole moments?

Kris Sigurdson, Michael Doran, Andriy Kurylov, Robert R. Caldwell, Marc

Kamionkowski Phys. Rev. D70 (2004) 083501 [astro-ph/0406355]

Page 21: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Effective Interaction

The effective interaction Lagrangian:

In the nonrelativistic limit:

Page 22: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints From

• Cosmological Relic Abundance

• Direct Detection

• Cosmology (CMB and LSS)

• Precision Standard Model

• Production at Accelerators

• Gamma Rays

Page 23: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Relic Abundance

Standard Cosmological Freeze-out Calculation

Page 24: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints

Page 25: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Direct Detection

CDMS (Soudan):

Page 26: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints

Page 27: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Direct Detection

But… if the dipole strength is too large dipolar dark matter (DDM) will scatter in the atmosphere and

the rock above the detector and arrive at the detectorwith an energy below the detection threshold.

Strongest constraints from shallowest experiment with a null result. Balloon and Rocket experiments.

Page 28: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints

Page 29: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Effects on the Matter Power Spectrum

Black

Red

Blue

Page 30: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Effects on the CMB

Black

Red

Blue

Page 31: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints

Page 32: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Precision Standard Model

Muon g-2

Standard Model EDMs

Z-Pole

Page 33: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Precision Standard Model

Strongest Constraint:

Page 34: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints

Page 35: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Production at Accelerators

B+ and K+ decays:

LEP, Tevatron? Tricky.

Look for missing energy

Need the full theory not the effective theory

Page 36: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Gamma Rays

• Annihilation at the Galactic center could produce a nearly monoenergetic line.

• EGRET Constraints

• Possible GLAST signal

Page 37: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraints

Page 38: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Dipolar Dark Matter?

• Dipolar Dark Matter: A phenomenologically viable dark-matter candidate with a mass between an MeV and a GeV and predominantly dipole interactions.

Page 39: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Kinetic decoupling of WIMPs and a small-scale cutoff to P(k)

Chen, MK, Zhang, PRD 64, 021302[astro-ph/0103452]

Page 40: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Boehm, Fayet, Schaeffer (2000): calculatedsmoothing scale of WIMP dark matter dueto elastic scattering of WIMPs from SMparticles after freezeoutLed to Moore et al (2004) claim of earth-massWIMP clumps in Galactic halo

However, this work assumes energy-independent cross section for WIMPscattering from light-quark/leptons and photons

Page 41: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Our work: showed that cross sectionfor elastic scattering of MSSM WIMPsfrom light SM particles is proportionalto energy squared. Kinetic decouplingtherefore takes place muchh earlierleading to much smaller smoothing scalethan obtained by assuming (incorrectly)energy-independent cross sections.

Page 42: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Particle Decays and the CMBXuelei Chen and MK, PRD 70, 043502 (2004)

also, Kasuya, Kawasaki, Sugiyama (2004)and Pierpaoli (2004)

• Speculation: early reionization from WMAP due to decaying particles rather than early stars

• Can we constrain dark-matter decay channels and lifetimes from the CMB and elsewhere?

Page 43: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Decays to photons with E>13.6 eV

• Energy loss processes include photoionization, Compton scattering, pair production from electrons, nuclei, background photons, and scattering from background photons

Page 44: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

z=10

z=100

z=300

Photon energy loss rate per Hubble time

Page 45: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Transparencywindow

Photons absorbed by IGM

Page 46: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Particles decay to electrons

• Energy lost by ionization or inverse-Compton scattering CMB

• Energy generally deposited in IGM unlessGeV<E<50 TeV, when upscattered CMBphoton in transparency window

Page 47: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Electron energy-loss rate

ionization

InverseCompton

Page 48: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

IGMoptical depth,temperature,and ionizationfor long-liveddecaying particle

Depends onlyon energy-injection rate

Page 49: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Ionizationinduced byparticledecaysionizes IGMand affectsCMB powerspectra

Page 50: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

again for l<100

Page 51: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

And for short-lived particles; now depends onenergy-injection rate and lifetime.

Page 52: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.
Page 53: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraintsfrom CMBto decayswhere energyabsorbed inIGM

Page 54: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Constraintsfrom diffusebackgroundsfor decaysin transparencywindow

Page 55: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Covariancewith cosmologicalparameters

Baryon density

Spectral index

Page 56: Non-minimal cold dark matter particles Marc Kamionkowski Caltech Bonn 29 Aug 2005.

Summary

• Self-interacting dark matter more tightly constrained than one might have thought

• dark matter from charged-particle decay may account for dwarf-galaxy dearth

• Or mimic running of spectral index• Couplings to photons tightly constrained• CMB provides new constraints to dark-matter decays

for decay products that heat IGM rather than propagate undisturbed


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