Decaying dark matter, the H0 tension, and the lithium problem

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Abstract

It has long been known that the sharpened tension between the observed and inferred values of the Hubble constant H0 can be alleviated if a fraction of dark-matter particles of type χ were produced nonthermally in association with photons γ through the decays of a heavy and relatively long-lived state, viz., X→χγ. It was recently proposed that this model can also resolve the long-standing lithium (also known as Li7) problem if M=4 MeV and m=0.04 keV, where M and m are, respectively, the masses of X and χ. We confront this proposal with experiment and demonstrate that cold dark matter decaying before recombination cannot resolve the H0 problem. Moreover, we show that the best-case scenario for alleviating the H0 tension within the context of cold dark matter decaying before recombination arises when the particles decay exclusively into dark radiation, while leaving completely unmodified the production of light elements. To this end, we calculate the general functional form describing the number of equivalent light neutrino species ΔNeff carried by χ. We show that to resolve the H0 tension at the 1σ level, a 55% correction in m is needed and that the required ΔNeff is excluded at 95% C.L. by Planck data. We argue in favor of a more complex model of dynamical dark matter to relax the H0 tension.

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APA

Anchordoqui, L. A. (2021). Decaying dark matter, the H0 tension, and the lithium problem. Physical Review D, 103(3). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.103.035025

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