Author:
Samanta Rome,Urban Federico R.
Abstract
Abstract
Ultra-light primordial black holes with masses M
BH < 109 g evaporate before big-bang nucleosynthesis producing all matter fields, including dark matter, in particular super-heavy dark matter: M
DM ≳ 1010 GeV. If the dark matter gets its mass via U(1) symmetry-breaking, the phase transition that gives a mass to the dark matter also produces cosmic strings which radiate gravitational waves. Because the symmetry-breaking scale ΛCS is of the same order as M
DM, the gravitational waves radiated by the cosmic strings have a large enough amplitude to be detectable across all frequencies accessible with current and planned experimental facilities. Moreover, an epoch of early primordial black hole domination introduces a unique spectral break in the gravitational wave spectrum whose frequency is related to the super-heavy dark matter mass. Hence, the features of a stochastic background of primordial gravitational waves could indicate that super-heavy dark matter originated from primordial black holes. In this perspective, the recent finding of a stochastic common-spectrum process across many pulsars by two nano-frequency pulsar timing arrays would fix the dark matter mass to be 3 × 1013 GeV ≲ M
DM ≲ 1014 GeV. The (non-)detection of a spectral break at 0.2 Hz ≲ f
* ≲ 0.4 Hz would (exclude) substantiate this interpretation of the signal.
Subject
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
23 articles.
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