Dark QED from Inflation
Asimina Arvanitaki, Savas Dimopoulos, Marios Galanis, Davide Racco,, Olivier Simon, Jedidiah O. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper explores how interactions in dark QED during inflation can produce dark matter with a wide mass range, significantly affecting detection strategies and differing from non-interacting dark sector models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that dark sector interactions during inflation can lead to vastly different dark matter masses, influencing experimental search approaches.
Findings
Dark QED interactions alter dark matter mass range.
Energy transfer from vector condensate to dark electrons via plasma processes.
Dark electron mass range from 50 MeV to 30 TeV, impacting detection strategies.
Abstract
One contribution to any dark sector's abundance comes from its gravitational production during inflation. If the dark sector is weakly coupled to the inflaton and the Standard Model, this can be its only production mechanism. For non-interacting dark sectors, such as a free massive fermion or a free massive vector field, this mechanism has been studied extensively. In this paper we show, via the example of dark massive QED, that the presence of interactions can result in a vastly different mass for the dark matter (DM) particle, which may well coincide with the range probed by upcoming experiments. In the context of dark QED we study the evolution of the energy density in the dark sector after inflation. Inflation produces a cold vector condensate consisting of an enormous number of bosons, which via interesting processes - Schwinger pair production, strong field electromagnetic…
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