MSI Special Seminar - Would we notice if dark matter just disappeared?

Torsten Bringmann (University of Oslo)

Jun 26, 2018 12:00 PM
Location: MSI Conference Room (3550 University)
MSI Special Seminar

In the cosmological concordance model, dark matter is assumed to be cold, non-interacting and covariantly conserved, implying that its density decreases linearly with the volume of the expanding universe. The arguably least testable deviation from this simple picture would be that a small fraction of dark matter was, at any time, converted to an invisible form of radiation. I will discuss how cosmic microwave and large-scale structure observations can test such a scenario in a model-independent way, thus putting a conservative bound on how much dark matter could have disappeared at any point during the cosmological evolution. For late conversion times, but still before the onset of structure formation, such a 'disappearance' of a few percent of the dark matter would even mitigate a well-known discrepancy between these datasets. There is a variety of scenarios that can be mapped to this general idea, such as decaying dark matter or merging primordial black holes. In the second part of the talk, I will discuss yet another concrete particle physics realization, featuring a second era of dark matter annihilation after thermal freeze-out. As a bonus, this model naturally allows for velocity-dependent dark matter self-interactions strong enough to address the small-scale problems of structure formation.




Upcoming Seminars

TSI Seminars take place weekly during the Fall and Winter terms. TSI seminars are intended to be accessible to scientists from the entire breadth of backgrounds at TSI, including, Physics, Planetary Science, Geology, Atmospheric Science, and Astrobiology. Our seminar series is partially funded by the Centre de recherche en astrophysique du Québec (CRAQ).

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