Constraints on nature of ultra light dark matter particles with 21cm forest [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1910.06011


The ultra-light scalar fields can arise ubiquitously, for instance, as a result of the spontaneous breaking of an approximate symmetry such as the axion and more generally the axion-like particles. In addition to the particle physics motivations, these particles can also play a major role in cosmology by contributing to dark matter abundance and affecting the structure formation at sub-Mpc scales. In this paper, we propose to use the 21cm forest observations to probe the nature of ultra-light dark matter. The 21cm forest can probe much smaller scales than the Lyman-$\alpha$ forest, that is, $k\gtrsim 10\mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}$. We explore the range of the ultra-light dark matter mass $m_{u}$ and $f_u$, the fraction of ultra-light dark matter with respect to the total matter, which can be probed by the 21cm forest. We find that 21cm forest can potentially put the dark matter mass lower bound $m_u \gtrsim 10^{-18}$ eV for $f_u=1$, which is 3 orders of magnitude bigger mass scale than those probed by the current Lyman-$\alpha$ forest observations.While the effects of the ultra-light particles on the structure formation become smaller when the dominant component of dark matter is composed of the conventional cold dark matter, we find that the 21cm forest is still powerful enough to probe the sub-component ultra-light dark matter mass up to the order of $10^{-19}$ eV. The Fisher matrix analysis shows that $(m_u,f_u)\sim (10^{-20}\mathrm{eV}, 0.3)$ is the most optimal parameter set which the 21cm forest can probe with the minimal errors for a sub-component ultra-light dark matter scenario.

Read this paper on arXiv…

H. Shimabukuro, K. Ichiki and K. Kadota
Tue, 15 Oct 19
84/90

Comments: 12 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to PRD