4.7 Article

Direct detection portals for self-interacting dark matter

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 89, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.89.035009

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. NSF [PHY-1214648, 1066293, PHY-1342611]
  2. UCR
  3. DOE [DE-SC0007859, DE-SC0010137]
  4. NASA Astrophysics Theory [NNX11AI17]
  5. CETUP* (Center for Theoretical Underground Physics and Related Areas)
  6. Division Of Physics
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1342611, 1214648] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Dark matter self-interactions can affect the small scale structure of the Universe, reducing the central densities of dwarfs and low surface brightness galaxies in accord with observations. From a particle physics point of view, this points toward the existence of a 1-100 MeV particle in the dark sector that mediates self-interactions. Since mediator particles will generically couple to the Standard Model, direct detection experiments provide sensitive probes of self-interacting dark matter. We consider three minimal mechanisms for coupling the dark and visible sectors: photon kinetic mixing, Z boson mass mixing, and the Higgs portal. Self-interacting dark matter motivates a new benchmark paradigm for direct detection via momentum-dependent interactions, and ton-scale experiments will cover astrophysically motivated parameter regimes that are unconstrained by current limits. Direct detection is a complementary avenue to constrain velocity-dependent self-interactions that evade astrophysical bounds from larger scales, such as those from the bullet cluster.

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