Abstract

Dark matter (DM) with sizeable self-interactions mediated by a light species offers a compelling explanation of the observed galactic substructure; furthermore, the direct coupling between DM and a light particle contributes to the DM annihilation in the early universe. If the DM abundance is due to a dark particle-antiparticle asymmetry, the DM annihilation cross-section can be arbitrarily large, and the coupling of DM to the light species can be significant. We consider the case of asymmetric DM interacting via a light (but not necessarily massless) Abelian gauge vector boson, a dark photon. In the massless dark photon limit, gauge invariance mandates that DM be multicomponent, consisting of positive and negative dark ions of different species which partially bind in neutral dark atoms. We argue that a similar conclusion holds for light dark photons; in particular, we establish that the multi-component and atomic character of DM persists in much of the parameter space where the dark photon is sufficiently light to mediate sizeable DM self-interactions. We discuss the cosmological sequence of events in this scenario, including the dark asymmetry generation, the freeze-out of annihilations, the dark recombination and the phase transition which gives mass to the dark photon. We estimate the effect of self-interactions in DM haloes, taking into account this cosmological history. We place constraints based on the observed ellipticity of large haloes, and identify the regimes where DM self-scattering can affect the dynamics of smaller haloes, bringing theory in better agreement with observations. Moreover, we estimate the cosmological abundance of dark photons in various regimes, and derive pertinent bounds.

Highlights

  • ArXiv ePrint: 1403.1077 self-scattering of Dark matter (DM), if too strong, can isotropise the haloes

  • Dark matter self-interacting via a light mediator is motivated by the observed galactic structure

  • It can be well accommodated within the asymmetric DM scenario, which allows for arbitrarily large DM annihilation cross-sections and for sizeable direct couplings of DM to light species

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Summary

Introduction

ArXiv ePrint: 1403.1077 self-scattering of DM, if too strong, can isotropise the haloes. We show that this regime encompasses much of the parameter space of interest, in which the following two conditions are satisfied: first, the dark photon is sufficiently light to mediate long-range DM self-scattering and, secondly the DM coupling to the dark photon is sufficiently strong for this scattering to affect the halo dynamics. In this multi-component regime, DM self-interactions in haloes today are suppressed with respect to what would be expected if DM were single-component, due to the formation of neutral DM bound states (dark atoms) in the early universe.

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