The Effects of Dark Matter Annihilation on Cosmic Reionization
Alexander A. Kaurov, Dan Hooper, Nickolay Y. Gnedin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how dark matter annihilation during the epoch of reionization could significantly affect cosmic reionization and optical depth, and how future observations can constrain dark matter properties.
Contribution
It introduces a new analysis of dark matter annihilation effects during reionization, incorporating recent structure formation results and exploring observational constraints.
Findings
Dark matter annihilation could ionize the universe at the percent level between redshifts 20-100.
Future CMB polarization and 21 cm measurements can constrain dark matter annihilation cross sections.
Constraints could be comparable to those from dwarf galaxy and cosmic ray observations.
Abstract
We revisit the possibility of constraining the properties of dark matter (DM) by studying the epoch of cosmic reionization. Previous studies have shown that DM annihilation was unlikely to have provided a large fraction of the photons that ionized the universe, but instead played a subdominant role relative to stars and quasars. The DM, however, begins to efficiently annihilate with the formation of primordial microhalos at , much earlier than the formation of the first stars. Therefore, if DM annihilation ionized the universe at even the percent level over the interval , it can leave a significant imprint on the global optical depth, . Moreover, we show that cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization data and future 21 cm measurements will enable us to more directly probe the DM contribution to the optical depth. In order to compute the…
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