Author:
Bellomo N.,Berghaus Kim V.,Boddy Kimberly K.
Abstract
Abstract
Dark matter freeze-in is a compelling cosmological production mechanism in which all or
some of the observed abundance of dark matter is generated through feeble interactions it has with
the Standard Model. In this work we present the first analysis of freeze-in dark matter
fluctuations and consider two benchmark models: freeze-in through the direct decay of a heavy
vector boson and freeze-in through pair annihilation of Standard Model particles in the thermal
bath. We provide a theoretical framework for determining the impact of freeze-in on curvature and
dark matter isocurvature perturbations. We determine freeze-in dark matter fluid properties from
first principles, tracking its evolution from its relativistic production to its final cold state,
and calculate the evolution of the dark matter isocurvature perturbation. We find that in the
absence of initial isocurvature, the freeze-in production of dark matter does not source
isocurvature. However, for an initial isocurvature perturbation seeded by inflation, the
nonthermal freeze-in process may allow for a fraction of the isocurvature to persist, in contrast
to the exponential suppression it receives in the case of thermal dark matter. In either case,
the evolution of the curvature mode is unaffected by the freeze-in process. We show sensitivity
projections of future cosmic microwave background experiments to the amplitude of uncorrelated,
totally anticorrelated, and totally correlated dark matter isocurvature perturbations. From these
projections, we infer the sensitivity to the abundance of freeze-in dark matter that sustains some
fraction of the primordial isocurvature.
Subject
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
2 articles.
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