
TL;DR
Dark quark nuggets, formed in the early universe under certain conditions, are a viable macroscopic dark matter candidate with diverse detection possibilities across gravitational, electromagnetic, and cosmological observations.
Contribution
This paper introduces dark quark nuggets as a novel macroscopic dark matter candidate and explores their formation, properties, and multiple experimental detection strategies.
Findings
Dark quark nuggets can have masses from 10^{23} g to 10^{-7} g.
Detection methods include gravitational microlensing and gravitational wave signals.
Dark mesons may act as dark radiation detectable by future CMB experiments.
Abstract
"Dark quark nuggets", a lump of dark quark matter, can be produced in the early universe for a wide range of confining gauge theories and serve as a macroscopic dark matter candidate. The two necessary conditions, a nonzero dark baryon number asymmetry and a first-order phase transition, can be easily satisfied for many asymmetric dark matter models and QCD-like gauge theories with a few massless flavors. For confinement scales from 10 keV to 100 TeV, these dark quark nuggets with a huge dark baryon number have their masses vary from to and their radii from to . Such macroscopic dark matter candidates can be searched for by a broad scope of experiments and even new detection strategies. Specifically, we have found that the gravitational microlensing experiments can probe heavier dark quark nuggets or…
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