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Dark-Disk Universe

Authors :
JiJi Fan
Matthew Reece
Lisa Randall
Andrey Katz
Source :
Physical Review Letters. 110
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Physical Society (APS), 2013.

Abstract

We point out that current constraints on dark matter imply only that the majority of dark matter is cold and collisionless. A subdominant fraction of dark matter could have much stronger interactions. In particular, it could interact in a manner that dissipates energy, thereby cooling into a rotationally-supported disk, much as baryons do. We call this proposed new dark matter component Double-Disk Dark Matter (DDDM). We argue that DDDM could constitute a fraction of all matter roughly as large as the fraction in baryons, and that it could be detected through its gravitational effects on the motion of stars in galaxies, for example. Furthermore, if DDDM can annihilate to gamma rays, it would give rise to an indirect detection signal distributed across the sky that differs dramatically from that predicted for ordinary dark matter. DDDM and more general partially interacting dark matter scenarios provide a large unexplored space of testable new physics ideas.<br />Concise companion to arXiv:1303.1521; v2: published in PRL, references added

Details

ISSN :
10797114 and 00319007
Volume :
110
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b95a38cf2c1c636b75437e6058d9022
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.110.211302