Heavy dark matter in rapidly evolving massive stars
Sandra Robles, Walter Tangarife, Giorgio Busoni

TL;DR
This study investigates how heavy dark matter is captured by massive stars throughout their evolution, revealing potential for dark matter to influence stellar collapse and black hole formation in early universe conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed modeling of heavy dark matter capture in evolving massive stars, incorporating multiple nuclear species and realistic velocity distributions, advancing understanding of dark matter's stellar effects.
Findings
Heavy DM can reach capture-annihilation equilibrium within stellar lifetimes.
Non-annihilating heavy DM could induce stellar collapse into black holes.
Capture efficiency depends on stellar stage, composition, and halo environment.
Abstract
We study the impact of heavy dark matter (DM) captured in massive stars via scattering(s) with the star constituents. We focus on the first stars and use stellar evolution simulations to track down how DM capture evolves over time from the zero-age main sequence to the late metal-rich stages of stellar evolution. During the early hydrogen-helium-dominated phase, the capture process is well described by scattering with two targets. As a star evolves, metal production leads to the formation of a dense core surrounded by a lighter envelope. The core significantly enhances the capture of ultra-heavy DM; in this case, three distinct nuclear species are required to accurately describe multiple-scattering capture. We use the Eddington inversion method to obtain a realistic DM velocity distribution, better suited when the star is near the center of a halo, than the widely used Maxwell-Boltzmann…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
