Partially acoustic dark matter, interacting dark radiation, and large scale structure

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The standard paradigm of collisionless cold dark matter is in tension with measurements on large scales. In particular, the best fit values of the Hubble rate H-0 and the matter density perturbation sigma(8) inferred from the cosmic microwave background seem inconsistent with the results from direct measurements. We show that both problems can be solved in a framework in which dark matter consists of two distinct components, a dominant component and a subdominant component. The primary component is cold and collisionless. The secondary component is also cold, but interacts strongly with dark radiation, which itself forms a tightly coupled flid. The growth of density perturbations in the subdominant component is inhibited by dark acoustic oscillations due to its coupling to the dark radiation, solving the sigma(8) problem, while the presence of tightly coupled dark radiation ameliorates the H-0 problem. The subdominant component of dark matter and dark radiation continue to remain in thermal equilibrium until late times, inhibiting the formation of a dark disk. We present an example of a simple model that naturally realizes this scenario in which both constituents of dark matter are thermal WIMPs. Our scenario can be tested by future stage-IV experiments designed to probe the CMB and large scale structure.
Publisher
SPRINGER
Issue Date
2016-12
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

JOURNAL OF HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS, no.12

ISSN
1126-6708
DOI
10.1007/JHEP12(2016)108
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/299074
Appears in Collection
PH-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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