CMB Constraints On The Thermal WIMP Mass And Annihilation Cross Section
Gary Steigman

TL;DR
This paper uses cosmic microwave background data to set bounds on the mass and annihilation cross section of thermal WIMP dark matter candidates, considering different particle properties and contributions.
Contribution
It provides updated constraints on WIMP mass and annihilation cross section based on CMB observations, accounting for particle-antiparticle nature and annihilation mechanisms.
Findings
Lower bound on WIMP mass is 50f GeV for self-conjugate particles.
Non self-conjugate WIMPs have at least twice the minimum mass.
CMB constraints exclude certain low-mass WIMPs as dark matter candidates.
Abstract
A thermal relic, often referred to as a weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP), is a particle produced during the early evolution of the Universe whose present (relic) abundance depends only on its mass and its thermally averaged annihilation cross section (annihilation rate factor) sigma*v_ann. Late time WIMP annihilation has the potential to affect the cosmic microwave background (CMB) power spectrum. Current observational constraints on the absence of such effects provide bounds on the mass and the annihilation cross section of relic particles that may, but need not be dark matter candidates. For a WIMP that is a dark matter candidate, the CMB constraint sets an upper bound to the annihilation cross section, leading to a lower bound to its mass that depends on whether or not the WIMP is its own antiparticle. For a self-conjugate WIMP, m_min = 50f GeV, where f is an…
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