Probing the nature of Dark Matter through the metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium
Jonas Bremer, Pratika Dayal, Emma V. Ryan-Weber

TL;DR
This study investigates how the metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium at high redshifts can constrain the properties of dark matter, comparing Cold and Warm Dark Matter models using a semi-analytic approach.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytic model that links galaxy formation, metal enrichment, and dark matter properties to constrain dark matter particle mass.
Findings
Cold Dark Matter and 3 keV Warm Dark Matter models fit high-redshift data without reionization feedback.
Larger halos dominate IGM metal enrichment in Warm Dark Matter models.
Future precise measurements of IGM metals could better constrain dark matter properties.
Abstract
We focus on exploring the metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium (IGM) in Cold and Warm (1.5 and 3 keV) Dark Matter (DM) cosmologies, and the constraints this yields on the DM particle mass, using a semi-analytic model, Delphi, that jointly tracks the Dark Matter and baryonic assembly of galaxies at including both Supernova and (a range of) reionization feedback (models). We find that while galaxies contribute half of all IGM metals in the Cold Dark Matter model by , given the suppression of low-mass halos, larger halos with provide about 80\% of the IGM metal budget in 1.5 keV Warm Dark Matter models using two different models for the metallicity of the interstellar medium. Our results also show that the only models compatible with two different high-redshift data sets, provided by the evolving…
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