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The Lyman-$alpha$ forest as a diagnostic of the nature of the dark matter

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 Added by Andrii Magalich
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The observed Lyman-$alpha$ flux power spectrum (FPS) is suppressed on scales below $sim~ 30~{rm km~s}^{-1}$. This cutoff could be due to the high temperature, $T_0$, and pressure, $p_0$, of the absorbing gas or, alternatively, it could reflect the free streaming of dark matter particles in the early universe. We perform a set of very high resolution cosmological hydrodynamic simulations in which we vary $T_0$, $p_0$ and the amplitude of the dark matter free streaming, and compare the FPS of mock spectra to the data. We show that the location of the dark matter free-streaming cutoff scales differently with redshift than the cutoff produced by thermal effects and is more pronounced at higher redshift. We, therefore, focus on a comparison to the observed FPS at $z>5$. We demonstrate that the FPS cutoff can be fit assuming cold dark matter, but it can be equally well fit assuming that the dark matter consists of $sim 7$ keV sterile neutrinos in which case the cutoff is due primarily to the dark matter free streaming.



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The renewed interest in the possibility that primordial black holes (PBHs) may constitute a significant part of the dark matter has motivated revisiting old observational constraints, as well as developing new ones. We present new limits on the PBH abundance, from a comprehensive analysis of high-resolution, high-redshift Lyman-$alpha$ forest data. Poisson fluctuations in the PBH number density induce a small-scale power enhancement which departs from the standard cold dark matter prediction. Using a grid of hydrodynamic simulations exploring different values of astrophysical parameters, {we obtain a marginalized upper limit on the PBH mass of $f_{rm PBH}M_{rm PBH} sim 60~M_{odot}$ at $2sigma$, when a Gaussian prior on the reionization redshift is imposed, preventing its posterior distribution to peak on very high values, which are disfavoured by the most recent estimates obtained both through Cosmic Microwave Background and Inter-Galactic Medium observations. Such bound weakens to $f_{rm PBH}M_{rm PBH} sim 170~M_{odot}$, when a conservative flat prior is instead assumed. Both limits significantly improves previous constraints from the same physical observable.} We also extend our predictions to non-monochromatic PBH mass distributions, ruling out large regions of the parameter space for some of the most viable PBH extended mass functions.
With recent Lyman-alpha forest data from BOSS and XQ-100, some studies suggested that the lower mass limit on the fuzzy dark matter (FDM) particles is lifted up to $10^{-21},mathrm{eV}$. However, such a limit was obtained by $Lambda$CDM simulations with the FDM initial condition and the quantum pressure (QP) was not taken into account which could have generated non-trivial effects in large scales structures. We investigate the QP effects in cosmological simulations systematically, and find that the QP leads to further suppression of the matter power spectrum at small scales, as well as the halo mass function in the low mass end. We estimate the suppressing effect of QP in the 1D flux power spectrum of Lyman-alpha forest and compare it with data from BOSS and XQ-100. The rough uncertainties of thermal gas properties in the flux power spectrum model calculation were discussed. We conclude that more systematic studies, especially with QP taken into account, are necessary to constrain FDM particle mass using Lyman-alpha forest.
The Lyman-$alpha$ forest is a valuable probe of dark matter models featuring a scale-dependent suppression of the power spectrum as compared to $Lambda$CDM. In this work, we present a new estimator of the Lyman-$alpha$ flux power spectrum that does not rely on hydrodynamical simulations. Our framework is characterized by nuisance parameters that encapsulate the complex physics of the intergalactic medium and sensitivity to highly non-linear small-scale modes. After validating the approach based on high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations for $Lambda$CDM, we derive conservative constraints on interacting dark matter models from BOSS Lyman-$alpha$ data on large scales, k<0.02(km/s)^(-1), with the relevant nuisance parameters left free in the model fit. The estimator yields lower bounds on the mass of cannibal dark matter, where freeze-out occurs through 3-to-2 annihilation, in the MeV range. Furthermore, we find that models of dark matter interacting with dark radiation, which have been argued to address the $H_0$ and $sigma_8$ tensions, are compatible with BOSS Lyman-$alpha$ data.
Using cosmological particle hydrodynamical simulations and uniform ultraviolet backgrounds, we compare Lyman-$alpha$ forest flux spectra predicted by the conventional cold dark matter (CDM) model, the free-particle wave dark matter (FP$psi$DM) model and extreme-axion wave dark matter (EA$psi$DM) models of different initial axion field angles against the BOSS Lyman-$alpha$ forest absorption spectra with a fixed boson mass $m_bsim 10^{-22}$eV. We recover results reported previously (Irv{s}iv{c} et al. 2017b; Armengaud et al. 2017) that the CDM model agrees better with the BOSS data than the FP$psi$DM model by a large margin, and we find the difference of total $chi^2$s is $120$ for $420$ data bins. These previous results demand a larger boson mass by a factor $>10$ to be consistent with the date and are in tension with the favoured value determined from local satellite galaxies. We however find that such tension is removed as some EA$psi$DM models predict Lyman-$alpha$ flux spectra agreeing better with the BOSS data than the CDM model, and the difference of total $chi^2$s can be as large as $24$ for the same bin number. This finding arises with no surprise since EA$psi$DM models have unique spectral shapes with spectral bumps in excess of the CDM power near the small-scale cutoff typical of $psi$DM linear matter power spectra as well as more extended cutoffs than FP$psi$DM (Zhang & Chiueh 2017a,b).
The Lyman-$alpha$ forest is a powerful tool to constrain warm dark matter models (WDM). Its main observable -- flux power spectrum -- should exhibit a suppression at small scales in WDM models. This suppression, however, can be mimicked by a number of thermal effects related to the instantaneous temperature of the intergalactic medium (IGM), and to the history of reionization and of the IGM heating (pressure effects). Therefore, to put robust bounds on WDM one needs to disentangle the effect of free-streaming of dark matter particles from the influence of all astrophysical effects. This task cannot be brute-forced due to the complexity of the IGM modelling. In this work, we model the sample of high-resolution and high-redshift quasar spectra (Boera et al 2018) assuming a thermal history that leads to the smallest pressure effects while still being broadly compatible with observations. We explicitly marginalize over observationally allowed values of IGM temperature and find that (thermal) WDM models with masses above 1.9 keV (at 95% CL) are consistent with the spatial shape of the observed flux power spectrum at $z=4-5$. Even warmer models would produce a suppression at scales that are larger than observed, independently of assumptions about thermal effects. This bound is significantly lower than previously claimed bounds, demonstrating the importance of the knowledge about the reionization history and of the proper marginalization over unknowns.
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