A<sc>bstract</sc> We consider the possibility of indirect detection of dark sector processes by investigating a novel form of interaction between ambient dark matter (DM) and primordial black holes (PBHs). The basic scenario we envisage is that the ambient DM is “dormant”, i.e., it has interactions with the SM, but its potential for an associated SM signal is not realized for various reasons. We argue that the presence of PBHs with active Hawking radiation (independent of any DM considerations) can act as a catalyst in this regard by overcoming the aforementioned bottlenecks. The central point is that PBHs radiate all types of particles, whether in the standard model (SM) or beyond (BSM), which have a mass at or below their Hawking temperature. The emission of such radiation is “democratic” (up to the particle spin), since it is based on a coupling of sorts of gravitational origin. In particular, such shining of (possibly dark sector) particles onto ambient DM can then activate the latter into giving potentially observable SM signals. We illustrate this general mechanism with two specific models. First, we consider asymmetric DM, which is characterized by an absence of ambient anti-DM, and consequently the absence of DM indirect detection signals. In this case, PBHs can “resurrect” such a signal by radiating anti-DM, which then annihilates with ambient DM in order to give SM particles such as photons. In our second example, we consider the PBH emission of dark gauge bosons which can excite ambient DM into a heavier state (which is, again, not ambient otherwise), this heavier state later decays back into DM and photons. Finally, we demonstrate that we can obtain observable signals of these BSM models from asteroid-mass PBHs (Hawking radiating currently with ~$$ \mathcal{O}\left(\textrm{MeV}\right) $$ temperatures) at gamma-ray experiments such as AMEGO-X.
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Close encounters of the primordial kind: A new observable for primordial black holes as dark matter
Primordial black holes (PBHs) remain a viable dark matter candidate in the asteroid-mass range. We point out that, in this scenario, the PBH abundance would be large enough for at least one object to cross through the inner Solar System per decade. Since Solar System ephemerides are modeled and measured to extremely high precision, such close encounters could produce detectable perturbations to orbital trajectories with characteristic features. We evaluate this possibility with a suite of simple Solar System simulations, and we argue that the abundance of asteroid-mass PBHs can plausibly be probed by existing and near-future data.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2317018
- PAR ID:
- 10631383
- Publisher / Repository:
- Physical Review D
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Physical Review D
- Volume:
- 110
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 2470-0010
- Subject(s) / Keyword(s):
- Cosmology Black Holes Detection Asteroids Primordial black holes physics
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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