Probing the Small Scale Matter Power Spectrum through Dark Matter Annihilation in the Early Universe
Aravind Natarajan, Nick Zhu, Naoki Yoshida

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel method to constrain the small-scale matter power spectrum by analyzing the effects of dark matter annihilation on the CMB, providing new limits on the primordial power spectrum's shape at small scales.
Contribution
It introduces a technique using CMB data to constrain the small-scale matter power spectrum through dark matter annihilation effects, extending understanding beyond large-scale observations.
Findings
Planck data constrains the small-scale power spectrum index m_s < 1.43-1.63.
Limits on dark matter annihilation parameters are established.
Constraints are relevant for models with a running spectral index.
Abstract
Recent observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies and the distribution of galaxies, galaxy clusters, and the Lyman Alpha forest have constrained the shape of the power spectrum of matter fluctuations on large scales k < few h/Mpc. We explore a new technique to constrain the matter power spectrum on smaller scales, assuming the dark matter is a Weakly Interacting Massive Particle (WIMP) that annihilates at early epochs. Energy released by dark matter annihilation can modify the spectrum of CMB temperature fluctuations and thus CMB experiments such as Planck have been able to constrain the quantity f <sigma v> /m < 1/88 picobarn c / GeV, where f is the fraction of energy absorbed by gas, <sigma v> is the annihilation rate assumed constant, and m is the particle mass. We assume the standard scale-invariant primordial matter power spectrum of P_prim(k) ~ k^{n_s} at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
