Galaxy UV-luminosity function and reionization constraints on axion dark matter
Brandon Bozek, David J. E. Marsh, Joseph Silk, Rosemary F.G. Wyse

TL;DR
This paper investigates how axion dark matter affects early galaxy formation and reionization, using UV-luminosity functions and cosmic microwave background data to constrain axion mass and its role in the universe's evolution.
Contribution
It introduces an analytic model linking axion mass to galaxy formation suppression and reionization history, providing new constraints on axion dark matter from observational data.
Findings
Axion masses below 10^{-23} eV are excluded as dominant DM components.
Axion mass of 10^{-22} eV is in 3σ tension with reionization measurements.
Future JWST and Advanced ACTPol observations can further test axion DM models.
Abstract
If the dark matter (DM) were composed of axions, then structure formation in the Universe would be suppressed below the axion Jeans scale. Using an analytic model for the halo mass function of a mixed DM model with axions and cold dark matter, combined with the abundance-matching technique, we construct the UV-luminosity function. Axions suppress high- galaxy formation and the UV-luminosity function is truncated at a faintest limiting magnitude. From the UV-luminosity function, we predict the reionization history of the universe and find that axion DM causes reionization to occur at lower redshift. We search for evidence of axions using the Hubble Ultra Deep Field UV-luminosity function in the redshift range -, and the optical depth to reionization, , as measured from cosmic microwave background polarization. All probes we consider consistently exclude $m_a\lesssim…
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