Proton-philic spin-dependent inelastic Dark Matter (pSIDM) as a viable explanation of DAMA/LIBRA-phase2
Abstract
We show that the Weakly Interacting Massive Particle scenario of proton-philic spin-dependent inelastic Dark Matter (pSIDM) can still provide a viable explanation of the observed DAMA modulation amplitude in compliance with the constraints from other experiments after the release of the DAMA/LIBRA-phase2 data and including the recent bound from COSINE-100, that uses the same NaI target of DAMA. The pSIDM scenario provided a viable explanation of DAMA/LIBRA--phase1 both for a Maxwellian WIMP velocity distribution and in a halo-independent approach. At variance with DAMA/LIBRA-phase1, for which the modulation amplitudes showed an isolated maximum at low energy, the DAMA/LIBRA-phase2 spectrum is compatible to a monotonically decreasing one. Moreover, due to its lower threshold, it is sensitive to WIMP-iodine interactions at low WIMP masses. Due to the combination of these two effects pSIDM can now explain the yearly modulation observed by DAMA/LIBRA only when the WIMP velocity distribution departs from a standard Maxwellian. In this case the WIMP mass m and mass splitting δ fall in the approximate ranges 7 GeV m 17 GeV and 18 keVδ29 keV. The recent COSINE-100 bound is naturally evaded in the pSDIM scenario due to its large expected modulation fractions.
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