Cargando…

Nonthermal production of WIMPs, cosmic e± excesses, and γ rays from the Galactic Center

In this paper we propose a dark matter model and study aspects of its phenomenology. Our model is based on a new dark matter sector with a U(1)′ gauge symmetry plus a discrete symmetry added to the standard model of particle physics. The new fields of the dark matter sector have no hadronic charges...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bi, Xiao-Jun, Brandenberger, Robert, Gondolo, Paolo, Li, Tian-jun, Yuan, Qiang, Zhang, Xin-min
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.80.103502
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1233189
Descripción
Sumario:In this paper we propose a dark matter model and study aspects of its phenomenology. Our model is based on a new dark matter sector with a U(1)′ gauge symmetry plus a discrete symmetry added to the standard model of particle physics. The new fields of the dark matter sector have no hadronic charges and couple only to leptons. Our model cannot only give rise to the observed neutrino mass hierarchy, but can also generate the baryon number asymmetry via nonthermal leptogenesis. The breaking of the new U(1)′ symmetry produces cosmic strings. The dark matter particles are produced nonthermally from cosmic string loop decay which allows one to obtain sufficiently large annihilation cross sections to explain the observed cosmic ray positron and electron fluxes recently measured by the PAMELA, ATIC, PPB-BETS, Fermi-LAT, and HESS experiments while maintaining the required overall dark matter energy density. The high velocity of the dark matter particles from cosmic string loop decay leads to a low phase space density and thus to a dark matter profile with a constant density core in contrast to what happens in a scenario with thermally produced cold dark matter where the density keeps rising towards the center. As a result, the flux of γ rays radiated from the final leptonic states of dark matter annihilation from the Galactic center is suppressed and satisfies the constraints from the HESS γ-ray observations.