14–16 May 2024
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

Imprints of dark stars in the 21-cm signal

Not scheduled
2h
61/1-201 - Pas perdus - Not a meeting room - (CERN)

61/1-201 - Pas perdus - Not a meeting room -

CERN

10
Show room on map

Speaker

Boris Betancourt Kamenetskaia (Technical University of Munich)

Description

A strongly self-interacting component of dark matter can lead to formation of compact objects. These objects (dark stars) can in principle be detected by emission of gravitational waves from coalescence with black holes or other neutron stars or via gravitational lensing. However, in the case where dark matter admits annihilations, these compact dark matter made objects can have significant impact on the cosmic reionization and the 21-cm signal. We demonstrate that even if dark matter has suppressed annihilations, dark stars could inject a substantial amount of photons that would interact with the intergalactic medium. For dark matter parameters compatible with current observational constraints, dark stars could modify the observed reionization signal in a considerable way.

Would you be interested in presenting a poster? (this will not impact the decision on your talk) yes

Primary author

Boris Betancourt Kamenetskaia (Technical University of Munich)

Co-authors

Dr Alejandro Ibarra (Technical University of Munich) Dr Chris Kouvaris (National Technical University of Athens)

Presentation materials