Dark matter from hot big bang black holes
Abstract
If the temperature of the hot thermal plasma in the Early Universe was within a few orders of magnitude of the Planck scale M Pl, then the hoop conjecture predicts the formation of microscopic black holes from particle collisions in the plasma. Although these evaporated instantly, they would have left behind a relic abundance of all stable degrees of freedom which couple to gravity. Here we show that, upon minimal assumptions of a high reheat temperature and semiclassical black hole dynamics, this process could have produced the relic abundance of dark matter observed today for a particle mass anywhere in the range of 100~keV mdm < M Pl, though it could be subdominant to graviton-mediated freeze-in above mdm MeV. The production mechanism does not rely on any additional assumptions about non-gravitational dark matter-Standard Model interaction.
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