Constraints on dark matter particles from theory, galaxy observations and N-body simulations
Abstract
Mass bounds on dark matter (DM) candidates are obtained for particles decoupling in or out of equilibrium with arbitrary isotropic and homogeneous distribution functions. A coarse grained Liouville invariant primordial phase space density D is introduced. Combining its value with recent photometric and kinematic data on dwarf spheroidal satellite galaxies in the Milky Way (dShps), the DM density today and N-body simulations, yields upper and lower bounds on the mass, primordial phase space densities and velocity dispersion of the DM candidates. The mass of the DM particles is bound in the few keV range. If chemical freeze out occurs before thermal decoupling, light bosonic particles can Bose-condense. Such Bose-Einstein condensate is studied as a dark matter candidate. Depending on the relation between the critical(Tc)and decoupling(Td)temperatures, a BEC light relic could act as CDM but the decoupling scale must be higher than the electroweak scale. The condensate tightens the upper bound on the particle's mass. Non-equilibrium scenarios that describe particle production and partial thermalization, sterile neutrinos produced out of equilibrium and other DM models are analyzed in detail obtaining bounds on their mass, primordial phase space density and velocity dispersion. Light thermal relics with m few keV and sterile neutrinos lead to a primordial phase space density compatible with cored dShps and disfavor cusped satellites. Light Bose condensed DM candidates yield phase space densities consistent with cores and if Tc Td also with cusps. Phase space density bounds from N-body simulations suggest a potential tension for WIMPS with m 100 GeV,Td 10 MeV .
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.