
TL;DR
This paper explores a dissipative hidden sector dark matter model with a dark photon, analyzing its effects on cosmology and galaxy structure, and demonstrating its potential to explain observed galactic features.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dissipative dark matter model with a dark photon, linking galactic dynamics to supernova energy transfer and providing testable bounds on model parameters.
Findings
Dark photon kinetic mixing strength $\ o 10^{-9}$ explains galactic structure.
Dissipative plasma halo model reproduces galaxy rotation curves.
Constraints on model parameters guide future experiments.
Abstract
A simple way of explaining dark matter without modifying known Standard Model physics is to require the existence of a hidden (dark) sector, which interacts with the visible one predominantly via gravity. We consider a hidden sector containing two stable particles charged under an unbroken gauge symmetry, hence featuring dissipative interactions. The massless gauge field associated with this symmetry, the dark photon, can interact via kinetic mixing with the ordinary photon. In fact, such an interaction of strength appears to be necessary in order to explain galactic structure. We calculate the effect of this new physics on Big Bang Nucleosynthesis and its contribution to the relativistic energy density at Hydrogen recombination. We then examine the process of dark recombination, during which neutral dark states are formed, which is important for…
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