4.7 Article

Cosmic radio background from primordial black holes at cosmic dawn

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 107, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.107.083013

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The presence of an extra radio background has important implications for the observation of the 21-cm signal during different cosmic periods. The deep absorption trough observed by the EDGES experiment has sparked interest in this scenario, and the study of the cosmic radio background in the early Universe remains of great interest. Investigating the scenario where the radio background is produced by primordial black holes (PBHs), it is found that PBHs can generate the required cosmic radio background for reproducing the 21-cm absorption signal seen by the EDGES.
The presence of an extra radio background besides the cosmic microwave background has important implications for the observation of the 21-cm signal during the cosmic dark ages, cosmic dawn, and the epoch of reionization. The strong absorption trough found in the 21-cm global spectrum measured by the EDGES experiment, which has a much greater depth than the standard model prediction, has drawn great interest to this scenario, but more generally it is still of great interest to consider such a cosmic radio background in the early Universe. To be effective in affecting the 21-cm signal at early time, such a radio background must be produced by sources that can emit strong radio signals but a modest amount of x rays so that the gas is not heated up too early. We investigate the scenario where such a radio background is produced by the primordial black holes (PBHs). For PBHs with a single mass, we find that if the PBHs' abundance log(fPBH) (ratio of total PBH mass density to total matter density) and mass satisfy the relation log(fPBH) similar to -1.8 log(M center dot/M circle dot) - 3.5 for 1M circle dot less than or similar to M center dot less than or similar to 300M circle dot, and have jet emission, they can generate a cosmic radio background required for reproducing the 21-cm absorption signal seen by the EDGES. The accretion rate can be boosted if the PBHs are surrounded by dark matter halos, which permits a lower fPBH value to satisfy the EDGES observation. In the latter scenario, since the accretion rate can evolve rapidly during the cosmic dawn, the frequency (redshift), and depth of the absorption trough can determine the mass and abundance of the PBHs simultaneously. For absorption trough redshift similar to 17 and depth similar to - 500 mK, it corresponds to M center dot similar to 1.05M circle dot and fPBH similar to 1.5 x 10-4.

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