# Searching for Dark Matter with Neutron Star Mergers and Quiet Kilonovae

**Authors:** Joseph Bramante, Tim Linden, Yu-Dai Tsai

arXiv: 1706.00001 · 2018-03-28

## TL;DR

This paper proposes astrophysical signatures of dark matter that causes neutron star implosions, leading to observable effects such as altered merger rates, quiet kilonovae, and specific spatial distributions, which can test dark matter models.

## Contribution

It introduces new observable signatures of dark matter-induced neutron star implosions, including quiet kilonovae and spatial distribution patterns, to test dark matter theories.

## Key findings

- Dark matter causes neutron star implosions forming small black holes.
- Implosions reduce neutron star merger rates detectable by LIGO/Virgo.
- Spatial distribution of kilonovae can reveal dark matter effects.

## Abstract

We identify new astrophysical signatures of dark matter that implodes neutron stars (NSs), which could decisively test whether NS-imploding dark matter is responsible for missing pulsars in the Milky Way galactic center, the source of some $r$-process elements, and the origin of fast-radio bursts. First, NS-imploding dark matter forms $\sim 10^{-10}$ solar mass or smaller black holes inside neutron stars, which proceed to convert neutron stars into $\sim$1.5 solar mass BHs. This decreases the number of neutron star mergers seen by LIGO/Virgo (LV) and associated merger kilonovae seen by telescopes like DES, BlackGEM, and ZTF, and instead, producing a population of "black mergers" containing $\sim$1.5 solar mass black holes. Second, dark matter-induced neutron star implosions may create a new kind of kilonovae that lacks a detectable, accompanying gravitational signal, which we call "quiet kilonovae." Using DES data and the Milky Way's r-process abundance, we constrain quiet kilonovae. Third, the spatial distribution of neutron star merger kilonovae and quiet kilonovae in galaxies can be used to detect dark matter. NS-imploding dark matter destroys most neutron stars at the centers of disc galaxies, so that neutron star merger kilonovae would appear mostly in a donut at large radii. We find that as few as ten neutron star merger kilonova events, located to $\sim$1 kpc precision could validate or exclude dark matter-induced neutron star implosions at $2 \sigma$ confidence, exploring dark matter-nucleon cross-sections 4-10 orders of magnitude below current direct detection experimental limits. Similarly, NS-imploding dark matter as the source of fast radio bursts can be tested at $2 \sigma$ confidence once 20 bursts are located in host galaxies by radio arrays like CHIME and HIRAX.

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.00001/full.md

## References

71 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.00001/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.00001