Abstract
We reanalyze the effective field theory (EFT) approach for the scenario in which the particles that account for the dark matter (DM) in the universe are vector states that interact only through the Standard Model-like Higgs boson. These DM particles are searched for in direct and indirect detection in astrophysical experiments and in invisible Higgs decays at the LHC. The constraints obtained in these two search types are complementary and correlated. In recent years, it has been advocated that the EFT approach is problematic for small DM mass and that it does not capture all the aspects of vector DM; one should thus rather interpret the searches in ultraviolet complete theories that are more realistic. In this paper, we show that a more appropriate definition of the EFT with the introduction of an effective new physics scale parameter, can encompass such issues. We illustrate this by matching the EFT to two examples of ultraviolet completions for it: the U(1) model with a dark photon and a model that was recently adopted by the LHC experiments in which vectorlike fermions generate an effective interaction between the Higgs and the DM states at the one-loop level. Additionally, we find that the region of parameter space that is relevant for DM phenomenology is well inside the range of validity of the EFT. It thus provides a general parametrization of the effects of any ultraviolet model in the regime under exploration, making it the ideal framework for model-independent analyses of the vector DM Higgs-portal. Published by the American Physical Society 2024
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