4.6 Article

Dark matter axions in the early universe with a period of increasing temperature

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2023/05/028

Keywords

axions; dark matter theory; physics of the early universe

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This study investigates the production of axion dark matter in a nonstandard cosmological history with a scalar field and varying decay rate. It shows that under certain conditions, the axion mass and the Hubble expansion rate can cross multiple times, allowing for a new phase of oscillation. The required axion mass for the present dark matter relic density can be significantly smaller than predicted by the standard history, which can be tested by upcoming experiments targeting the axion-photon coupling.
We consider the production of axion dark matter through the misalignment mechanism in the context of a nonstandard cosmological history involving early matter domination by a scalar field with a time-dependent decay rate. In cases where the temperature of the Universe experiences a temporary period of increase, Hubble friction can be restored in the evolution of the axion field, resulting in the possibility of up to three crossings of the axion mass and the Hubble expansion rate. This has the effect of dynamically resetting the misalignment mechanism to a new initial state for a second distinct phase of oscillation. The resultant axion mass required for the present dark matter relic density is never bigger than the standard-history window and can be smaller by more than three orders of magnitude, which can be probed by upcoming experiments such as ABRACADABRA, KLASH, ADMX, MADMAX, and ORGAN, targeting the axion-photon coupling. This highlights the possibility of exploring the cosmological history prior to Big Bang Nucleosynthesis through searches for axion dark matter beyond the standard window.

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