A strong broadband 21 cm cosmological signal from dark matter spin-flip interactions
Mansi Dhuria, Viraj Karambelkar, Vikram Rentala, Priyanka Sarmah

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel dark matter interaction mechanism that could produce a strong, broadband 21cm absorption signal from the early universe, differing from standard cosmological predictions and potentially detectable through future experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a new dark matter spin-flip interaction model that predicts a unique, strong broadband 21cm absorption signal extending from the dark ages to cosmic dawn.
Findings
Predicts a strong, broadband 21cm absorption from 1.4 MHz to higher frequencies.
Shows the spin temperature can evolve differently from the kinetic temperature in this model.
Suggests future experiments could detect the light mediator responsible for the interaction.
Abstract
In the standard cosmology, it is believed that there are two relatively weak and distinct band-limited absorption features, with the first absorption minima near 20 MHz () and the other minima at higher frequencies between 50-110 MHz () in the global cosmological 21cm signal, which are signatures of collisional gas dynamics in the cosmic dark ages and Lyman- photons from the first stars at cosmic dawn, respectively. A similar prediction of two distinct band-limited, but stronger, absorption features is expected in models with excess gas cooling, which have been invoked to explain the EDGES signal. In this work, we explore a novel mechanism, where dark matter spin-flip interactions with electrons through a light axial-vector mediator could directly induce a 21cm absorption signal which is characteristically different from either of these. We find generically,…
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