Axion as a cold dark matter candidate: Low-mass case

  • Chan Gyung Park*
  • , Jai Chan Hwang
  • , Hyerim Noh
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

Axion as a coherently oscillating scalar field is known to behave as cold dark matter in all cosmologically relevant scales. For conventional axion mass with 10 -5eV, the axion reveals a characteristic damping behavior in the evolution of density perturbations on scales smaller than the Solar System size. The damping scale is inversely proportional to the square root of the axion mass. We show that the axion mass smaller than 10 -24eV induces a significant damping in the baryonic density power spectrum in cosmologically relevant scales, thus deviating from the cold dark matter in the scale smaller than the axion Jeans scale. With such a small mass, however, our basic assumption about the coherently oscillating scalar field is broken in the early Universe. This problem is shared by other dark matter models based on the Bose-Einstein condensate and the ultralight scalar field. We introduce a simple model to avoid this problem by introducing evolving axion mass in the early Universe and present observational effects of a present-day low-mass axion on the baryon density power spectrum, the cosmic microwave background radiation temperature power spectrum, and the growth rate of baryon density perturbation. In our low-mass axion model, we have a characteristic small-scale cutoff in the baryon density power spectrum below the axion Jeans scale. The small-scale deviations from the cold dark matter model in both matter and cosmic microwave background radiation power spectra clearly differ from the ones expected in the cold dark matter model mixed with the massive neutrinos as a hot dark matter component.

Original languageEnglish
Article number083535
JournalPhysical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology
Volume86
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012.10.22

Quacquarelli Symonds(QS) Subject Topics

  • Physics & Astronomy

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