A microphysically inspired approach to dark matter-dark energy interactions: first bounds on dark-sector scattering cross sections
A.A. Escobal, F.B. Abdalla, J.F. Jesus, E. Abdalla, C. Feng, J. A. S. Lima

TL;DR
This paper introduces a microphysically motivated dark-sector interaction model based on particle collision processes, constrains its parameters with cosmological data, and derives limits on dark matter and dark energy annihilation cross sections.
Contribution
It proposes a novel dark-sector interaction model derived from particle physics principles, unlike previous phenomenological approaches, and tests its cosmological implications.
Findings
The model is consistent with current cosmological data.
Upper limits are set on dark matter and dark energy interaction parameters.
Constraints imply a highly suppressed dark matter annihilation cross section.
Abstract
The observational tension regarding the value of the Hubble constant () has motivated the exploration of alternative cosmological scenarios, including Interacting Dark Energy models. However, the majority of IDE models studied in the literature rely on phenomenological interaction terms proportional to the Hubble parameter (e.g., ), which lack a clear microphysical justification and often suffer from large-scale instabilities. In this work, we propose and investigate a "bottom-up" IDE model where the interaction is formulated directly from particle physics collision processes, taking the form . This interaction represents a reversible annihilation/creation process between Dark Matter and Dark Energy, motivated by the Boltzmann equation. We test this model against a combination of background cosmological data, Pantheon Plus, Cosmic Chronometers, DESI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
