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Traditional dark matter (DM) models, eg. WIMPs, assume dark matter is weakly coupled to the standard model so that elastic scattering between DM and baryons can be described perturbatively by Born approximation. Most direct detection experiments are analyzed according to that assumption. We show that when the interaction is attractive and strong, DM-nucleus scattering exhibits rich resonant behavior with a highly non-trivial dependence on atomic mass. The scattering is non-perturbative in much of the natural parameter range, and a full numerical calculation is needed. We also show that the extended rather than point-like nature of nuclei significantly impacts the cross sections and must therefore be properly taken into account. These effects are particularly important for dark matter with GeV-scale masses, near the boundary of exclusion regions from existing direct detection limits. They also affect the interpretation of CMB constraints, as we show. We report the corrected limits, which are in some respects weaker and in other respects stronger than previous bounds in the literature, which were based on perturbation theory and point-like sources and hence are now superceded. Sexaquark ($uuddss$) DM with mass $lesssim 2$ GeV, which exchanges QCD mesons with baryons, remains unconstrained for most of the parameter space of interest.
The spatial and velocity distributions of dark matter particles in the Milky Way Halo affect the signals expected to be observed in searches for dark matter. Results from direct detection experiments are often analyzed assuming a simple isothermal di
The majority of the matter in the universe is still unidentified and under investigation by both direct and indirect means. Many experiments searching for the recoil of dark-matter particles off target nuclei in underground laboratories have establis
As part of the Snowmass process, the Cosmic Frontier WIMP Direct Detection subgroup (CF1) has drawn on input from the Cosmic Frontier and the broader Particle Physics community to produce this document. The charge to CF1 was (a) to summarize the curr
A portion of light scalar dark matter, especially axions, may organize into gravitationally bound clumps (stars) and be present in large number in the galaxy today. It is therefore of utmost interest to determine if there are novel observational sign
We derive 95% CL lower limits on the lifetime of decaying dark matter in the channels $Z u$, $Well$ and $h u$ using measurements of the cosmic-ray antiproton flux by the PAMELA experiment. Performing a scan over the allowed range of cosmic-ray propag