Reviving MeV-GeV indirect detection with inelastic dark matter

Author:

Berlin Asher11ORCID,Krnjaic Gordan122ORCID,Pinetti Elena12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

2. University of Chicago

Abstract

Thermal relic dark matter below 10GeV is excluded by cosmic microwave background data if its annihilation to visible particles is unsuppressed near the epoch of recombination. Usual model-building measures to avoid this bound involve kinematically suppressing the annihilation rate in the low-velocity limit, thereby yielding dim prospects for indirect detection signatures at late times. In this work, we investigate a class of cosmologically viable sub-GeV thermal relics with late-time annihilation rates that are detectable with existing and proposed telescopes across a wide range of parameter space. We study a representative model of inelastic dark matter featuring a stable state χ1 and a slightly heavier excited state χ2 whose abundance is thermally depleted before recombination. Since the kinetic energy of dark matter in the Milky Way is much larger than it is during recombination, χ1χ1χ2χ2 upscattering can efficiently regenerate a cosmologically long-lived Galactic population of χ2, whose subsequent coannihilations with χ1 give rise to observable gamma-rays in the 1MeV100MeV energy range. We find that proposed MeV gamma-ray telescopes, such as e-ASTROGAM, AMEGO, and MAST, would be sensitive to much of the thermal relic parameter space in this class of models and thereby enable both discovery and model discrimination in the event of a signal at accelerator or direct detection experiments. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Office of Science

University of Chicago

Kavli Foundation

Government of Canada

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada

Ministry of Colleges and Universities

National Quantum Information Science Research Centers

Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center

Province of Ontario

Publisher

American Physical Society (APS)

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