Constraints on dark matter to dark radiation conversion in the late universe with DES-Y1 and external data
Angela Chen, Dragan Huterer, Sujeong Lee, Agn\`es Fert\'e, Noah, Weaverdyck, Otavio Alonso Alves, C. Danielle Leonard, Niall MacCrann, Marco, Raveri, Anna Porredon, Eleonora Di Valentino, Jessica Muir, Pablo Lemos,, Andrew Liddle, Jonathan Blazek, Andresa Campos, Ross Cawthon

TL;DR
This study investigates models where dark matter converts to dark radiation at low redshifts, using multiple datasets to constrain the conversion rate and assess impacts on cosmological tensions.
Contribution
It introduces and constrains a DMDR model with two parameters, analyzing its effects on cosmological observables and tensions using combined observational data.
Findings
Constraints on dark matter conversion fraction: <0.32 (DES-Y1), <0.030 (CMB+SN+BAO)
Slight reduction in tension between DES and CMB+SN+BAO datasets
No significant improvement in Hubble tension or model preference over ΛCDM
Abstract
We study a phenomenological class of models where dark matter converts to dark radiation in the low redshift epoch. This class of models, dubbed DMDR, characterizes the evolution of comoving dark matter density with two extra parameters, and may be able to help alleviate the observed discrepancies between early- and late-time probes of the universe. We investigate how the conversion affects key cosmological observables such as the CMB temperature and matter power spectra. Combining 3x2pt data from Year 1 of the Dark Energy Survey, {\it Planck}-2018 CMB temperature and polarization data, supernovae (SN) Type Ia data from Pantheon, and baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data from BOSS DR12, MGS and 6dFGS, we place new constraints on the amount of dark matter that has converted to dark radiation and the rate of this conversion. The fraction of the dark matter that has converted since the…
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