Infrared Effects of Ultraviolet Operators on Dark Matter Freeze-In
Lindsay Forestell, David E. Morrissey

TL;DR
This paper investigates how ultraviolet operators influence dark matter production through freeze-in, showing that they can significantly affect relic density even at lower temperatures and during freeze-out.
Contribution
It demonstrates that non-renormalizable operators contribute to dark matter density at lower temperatures and during freeze-out, extending the understanding of ultraviolet freeze-in effects.
Findings
Ultraviolet freeze-in can impact dark matter density below the DM mass.
Late residual freeze-in reactions can increase relic density.
Dark sector self-thermalizes and undergoes thermal freeze-out.
Abstract
Dark matter (DM) that interacts too weakly with the Standard Model (SM) to reach full thermodynamic equilibrium can be still be created in significant amounts by rare SM collisions. This mechanism, called freeze-in, can proceed through a renormalizable connector operator with a very small coefficient, or a non-renormalizable connector operator suppressed by a large mass scale. In the latter non-renormalizable scenario, the dominant creation of DM particles typically occurs at the largest SM temperature attained during the radiation era (assuming a standard cosmological history), and for this reason it is referred to as ultraviolet freeze-in. We show that non-renormalizable operators can also contribute importantly to the DM density at lower temperatures down to below the mass of the DM particle. To do so, we compute the production, annihilation, and freeze-out of DM in a simple dark…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
