Cosmological production of ultralight dark matter axions
Abstract
The highly populated, low-energy excitations of a scalar field of mass ma 10-22\,eV can represent the full dark matter content of the universe and alleviate some tensions in the standard cosmological scenario on small-scales. This fuzzy dark matter component is commonly assumed to arise as the consequence of a new axion-like particle in the matter sector, yet for simplicity it is usually modeled in terms of a simple free quadratic field. In this paper we consider how the cosmological constraints are modified when the effects of an instanton potential and temperature-dependent mass are included. Current isocurvature and tensor bounds confirms that this particle should be formed before the end of a low-scale inflation period with Hubble parameter HI 2.5× 1012\,GeV, in accordance with previous free-field analysis. The axion decay constant, fa, which fixes axion couplings, appears in the instanton potential and determines the relic abundance, the stability of galaxy cores to axion emission, and the direct searches of fuzzy dark matter. If the axion mass is T-independent, we find that fa 1016\,GeV is required in order to reach the observed relic density without fine tuning the initial conditions, while for a T-dependent case this bound can be lowered by an order of magnitude. However, the anharmonicities in the instanton potential, and mainly a T-dependent mass, can delay the onset of field oscillations, leading to larger physical suppression scales in the matter power spectrum for a fixed zero-temperature axion mass. This may favor a string or accidental axion over one emerging from a strongly coupled gauge sector if this model is required to provide large galactic halo cores while simultaneously satisfying observational constraints from cosmic structure formation.
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