4.7 Article

Dark matter and gravitational waves from a dark big bang

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 107, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.107.083522

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The hot big bang is believed to be the origin of all matter and radiation in the Universe. Primordial nucleosynthesis provides strong evidence for the existence of a hot plasma in the early Universe. This paper describes a scenario in which dark matter can be formed around or even after primordial nucleosynthesis in a second big bang, called the dark big bang. The dark big bang occurs through a phase transition in the dark sector.
The hot big bang is often considered as the origin of all matter and radiation in the Universe. Primordial nucleosynthesis provides strong evidence that the early Universe contained a hot plasma of photons and baryons with a temperature T > MeV. However, the earliest probes of dark matter originate from much later times around the epoch of structure formation. In this work we describe a scenario in which dark matter (and possibly dark radiation) can be formed around or even after primordial nucleosynthesis in a second big bang, which we dub the dark big bang. The latter occurs through a phase transition in the dark sector that transforms dark vacuum energy into a hot dark plasma of particles; in this paper we focus on a first-order phase transition for the dark big bang. The correct dark matter abundance can be set by dark matter cannibalism or by pair annihilation within the dark sector followed by a thermal freeze-out. Alternatively ultraheavy dark-zilla dark matter can originate directly from bubble collisions during the dark big bang. We will show that the dark big bang is consistent with constraints from structure formation and the cosmic microwave background if it occurred when the Universe was less than one month old, corresponding to a temperature in the visible sector above OokeV thorn . While the dark matter evades direct and indirect detection, the dark big bang gives rise to striking gravity wave signatures to be tested at pulsar timing array experiments. Furthermore, the dark big bang allows for realizations of self-interacting and/or warm dark matter, which suggest exciting discovery potential in future small-scale structure observations.

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