TL;DR
This paper uses the full Planck CMB data set to constrain ultralight axion dark matter, finding no evidence for their presence but identifying a parameter window where they could coexist with inflationary signals, which future experiments can probe.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis combining temperature, polarization, and lensing data to constrain ultralight axion dark matter and its isocurvature perturbations using the full Planck dataset.
Findings
No evidence for ultralight axions in the mass range $10^{-33}$ to $10^{-24}$ eV.
Identified a parameter window where ULAs can contribute ~10% to dark matter and isocurvature at ~1%.
Future CMB-S4 observations will fully probe this window.
Abstract
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) places strong constraints on models of dark matter (DM) that deviate from standard cold DM (CDM), and on initial conditions beyond the scalar adiabatic mode. Here, the full \textit{Planck} data set (including temperature, -mode polarisation, and lensing deflection) is used to test the possibility that some fraction of the DM is composed of ultralight axions (ULAs). This represents the first use of CMB lensing to test the ULA model. We find no evidence for a ULA component in the mass range . We put percent-level constraints on the ULA contribution to the DM, improving by up to a factor of two compared to the case with temperature anisotropies alone. Axion DM also provides a low-energy window onto the high-energy physics of inflation through the interplay between the vacuum misalignment production of axions…
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