2 Dark matter through ALP portal and 2.1 Introduction
2.3 Existing constraints on ALP parameter space
3 A two component dark matter model in a generic ๐(1)๐ extension of SM and 3.1 Introduction
3.3 Theoretical and experimental constraints
3.4 Phenomenology of dark matter
3.5 Relic density dependence on ๐(1)๐ charge ๐ฅ๐ป
4 A pseudo-scalar dark matter case in ๐(1)๐ extension of SM and 4.1 Introduction
4.3 Theoretical and experimental constraints
Appendices
D Feynman diagrams in two-component DM model
โข The relic density coming from Planck satellite data [49]
The total relic abundance of DM in our model is given by the sum of the scalar (๐) and fermion (๐3) relic abundances:
Only for solutions falling exactly within the band given in Eq. (3.31) the totality of the DM can be explained by ๐ and ๐3.
โข Direct detection cross-section of DM scattering of nucleon set by various experiments such as XENON1T [66], LUX [65] and PandaX-II [174]
We implemented the model in the SARAH package [175] to calculate all the vertices, mass matrices, tadpole equations etc. The thermal cross sections and DM relic abundance are determined using micrOMEGAS-5.0.8 [176]. Even though the model introduces new free parameters, not all of them are important to DM analysis. For example, self-quartic coupling ๐๐ does not play any role in DM phenomenology. Hence we choose to fix ๐๐ = 0.1 in our analysis. The remaining free parameters relevant for DM analysis can be chosen as:
In the next sections, we will study how the DM phenomenology of this model depends on the free parameters and to do that we choose the following benchmark points which are allowed from all the above-mentioned constraints:
which we can be utilized to compute the relic density of both the components,
The direct detection study of our DM candidates ๐๐ and ๐3 are done here. The current experimental constraints on the DM direct detection assume the existence of only one DM candidate. As in our model, two-component DM candidates are predicted, and the contribution of each candidate to the direct detection cross-section should be rescaled by the fraction contributing to the total relic density. Hence it is convenient to define the fraction of the mass density of ๐th DM in the case of multi-component DM [156,157,178,179]
The upper limit on the direct detection now can be recast as
The above formula in Eq. (3.40) is an extension of the expression corresponding to the singlet scalar DM case [180]. The relative negative sign between the โ1 and โ2 contributions arises in our considered model as the couplings get modified according to Eq. (3.42). Due to the presence of the two different channels, depending on the parameter space, we can have destructive interference between these two channels, and direct detection can be very small.
This paper is available on arxiv under CC BY 4.0 DEED license.
Author:
(1) Shivam Gola, The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai.