Flooded Dark Matter and S Level Rise
Lisa Randall, Jakub Scholtz, and James Unwin

TL;DR
Flooded Dark Matter (FDM) proposes a scenario where dark matter is generated after inflation through late decays, allowing for very light DM, colder dark sectors, and novel implications for cosmology and baryogenesis.
Contribution
This paper introduces the Flooded Dark Matter framework, linking DM relic density to late decays and exploring its implications for light DM, entropy production, and baryogenesis.
Findings
Dark sector should be colder than the visible sector.
Light DM is compatible with larger couplings due to late decay.
Late decay of long-lived particles can dilute baryon asymmetry.
Abstract
Most dark matter (DM) models set the DM relic density by some interaction with Standard Model particles. Such models generally assume the existence of Standard Model particles early on, with the DM relic density a later consequence of those interactions. Perhaps a more compelling assumption is that DM is not part of the Standard Model sector and a population of DM too is generated at the end of inflation. This democratic assumption does not necessarily provide a natural value for the DM relic density, and superficially leads to too much entropy in the dark sector. We address the latter issue by the late decay of heavy particles produced at early times, associating the DM relic density with the lifetime of a long-lived state. We ask what it would take for this scenario to be compatible with observations in what we call Flooded Dark Matter (FDM) and discuss several interesting…
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