13–17 May 2024
University of Pittsburgh / Carnegie Mellon University
US/Eastern timezone

The Power of the Dark Sink

14 May 2024, 16:15
15m
David Lawrence Hall 120 (University of Pittsurgh)

David Lawrence Hall 120

University of Pittsurgh

Dark Matter Dark Matter

Speaker

Robert McGehee (University of Minnesota)

Description

We describe a simple dark sector structure which, if present, has implications for the direct detection of dark matter (DM): the Dark Sink. A Dark Sink transports energy density from the DM into light dark-sector states that do not appreciably contribute to the DM density. As an example, we consider a light, neutral fermion $\psi$ which interacts solely with DM $\chi$ via the exchange of a heavy scalar $\Phi$. We illustrate the impact of a Dark Sink by adding one to a DM freeze-in model in which $\chi$ couples to a light dark photon $\gamma'$ which kinetically mixes with the Standard Model (SM) photon. This freeze-in model (absent the sink) is itself a benchmark for ongoing experiments. In some cases, the literature for this benchmark has contained errors; we correct the predictions and provide them as a public code. We then analyze how the Dark Sink modifies this benchmark, solving coupled Boltzmann equations for the dark-sector energy density and DM yield. We check the contribution of the Dark Sink $\psi$'s to dark radiation; consistency with existing data limits the maximum attainable cross section. For DM with a mass between $\text{MeV} -\mathcal{O}(10\text{ GeV})$, adding the Dark Sink can increase predictions for the direct detection cross section all the way up to the current limits.

Primary authors

Prudhvi Bhattiprolu (University of Michigan) Robert McGehee (University of Minnesota) Aaron Pierce (University of Michigan)

Presentation materials