Abstract
Abstract
The majority of baryons, which account for 15% of the matter in the Universe, will end their lives as carbon and oxygen inside cold black dwarfs. Dark matter (DM) makes up the remaining 85% of the matter in the Universe; however, the fate of DM is unknown. Here we show that the destiny of purely gravitationally interacting DM particles follows one of two possible routes. The first possible route, the “radiation-destiny” scenario, is that massive DM particles lose sufficient energy through gravitational radiation, causing them to spiral into a supermassive black hole that ultimately disappears through Hawking radiation. The second possible route, the “drifting-alone” destiny, applies to lighter DM particles, where only the central DM halo region spirals into the central BH, which is then Hawking radiated away. The rest of the DM halo is ripped apart by the accelerated expansion of the Universe.
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics