Constraints from Ly-$\alpha$ forests on non-thermal dark matter including resonantly-produced sterile neutrinos.
We use BOSS DR9 quasars to constrain 2 cases of dark matter models: cold-plus-warm (C+WDM) where the warm component is a thermal relic, and sterile neutrinos resonantly produced in the presence of a lepton asymmetry (RPSN). We establish constraints on the relic mass m_x and its relative abundance $F=\Omega_{wdm}/\Omega_{dm}$ using a suite of hydrodynamical simulations in 28 C+WDM configurations. We find that the 3 sigma bounds approximately follow F ~ $0.35 (keV/m_x)^{-1.37}$ from BOSS alone. We also establish constraints on sterile neutrino mass and mixing angle by producing the non-linear flux power spectrum of 8 RPSN models, where the input linear power spectrum is computed directly from the particles distribution functions. We find values of lepton asymmetries for which sterile neutrinos as light as 6.5 keV (resp. 3.5 keV) are consistent with BOSS at the 2 sigma (resp. 3sigma) level. These limits tighten by close to a factor of 2 for lepton asymmetries departing from those yielding the coolest distribution functions.
Our Ly-a forest bounds can be strengthened if we include higher-resolution data from XQ-100, HIRES and MIKE. At these smaller scales, the flux power spectrum exhibits a suppression that can be due to Doppler broadening, IGM pressure smoothing or free-streaming of WDM particles. In the current work, we show that if one extrapolates temperatures from lower redshifts via broken power laws in T_0 and gamma, then our 3 sigma C+WDM bounds strengthen to F~ $0.20 (keV/m_x)^{-1.37}$, and the lightest RPSN consistent with our extended data set have masses of 7.0 keV at the 3 sigma level. Using dedicated hydrodynamical simulations, we show that a 7 keV sterile neutrino produced in a lepton asymmetry $L = 8 \times 10^{-6}$ is consistent at 1.9 sigma (resp. 3.1 sigma) with BOSS (resp. BOSS + higher-resolution), for the thermal history models tested in this work.
Publisher URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03118
DOI: arXiv:1706.03118v2
Keeping up-to-date with research can feel impossible, with papers being published faster than you'll ever be able to read them. That's where Researcher comes in: we're simplifying discovery and making important discussions happen. With over 19,000 sources, including peer-reviewed journals, preprints, blogs, universities, podcasts and Live events across 10 research areas, you'll never miss what's important to you. It's like social media, but better. Oh, and we should mention - it's free.
Researcher displays publicly available abstracts and doesn’t host any full article content. If the content is open access, we will direct clicks from the abstracts to the publisher website and display the PDF copy on our platform. Clicks to view the full text will be directed to the publisher website, where only users with subscriptions or access through their institution are able to view the full article.