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Constraints on dark matter to dark radiation conversion in the late universe with DES-Y1 and external data

Authors :
Chen, Angela
Huterer, Dragan
Lee, Sujeong
Ferté, Agnès
Weaverdyck, Noah
Alves, Otavio Alonso
Leonard, C. Danielle
MacCrann, Niall
Raveri, Marco
Porredon, Anna
Di Valentino, Eleonora
Muir, Jessica
Lemos, Pablo
Liddle, Andrew
Blazek, Jonathan
Campos, Andresa
Cawthon, Ross
Choi, Ami
Dodelson, Scott
Elvin-Poole, Jack
Gruen, Daniel
Ross, Ashley
Secco, Lucas F.
Sevilla, Ignacio
Sheldon, Erin
Troxel, Michael A.
Zuntz, Joe
Abbott, Tim
Aguena, Michel
Allam, Sahar
Annis, James
Avila, Santiago
Bertin, Emmanuel
Bhargava, Sunayana
Bridle, Sarah
Brooks, David
Rosell, Aurelio Carnero
Kind, Matias Carrasco
Carretero, Jorge
Costanzi, Matteo
Crocce, Martin
da Costa, Luiz
Pereira, Maria Elidaiana da Silva
Davis, Tamara
Doel, Peter
Eifler, Tim
Ferrero, Ismael
Fosalba, Pablo
Frieman, Josh
Garcia-Bellido, Juan
Gaztanaga, Enrique
Gerdes, David
Gruendl, Robert
Gschwend, Julia
Gutierrez, Gaston
Hinton, Samuel
Hollowood, Devon L.
Honscheid, Klaus
Hoyle, Ben
James, David
Jarvis, Mike
Kuehn, Kyler
Lahav, Ofer
Maia, Marcio
Marshall, Jennifer
Menanteau, Felipe
Miquel, Ramon
Morgan, Robert
Palmese, Antonella
Paz-Chinchon, Francisco
Malagón, Andrés Plazas
Roodman, Aaron
Sanchez, Eusebio
Scarpine, Vic
Schubnell, Michael
Serrano, Santiago
Smith, Mathew
Suchyta, Eric
Tarle, Gregory
Thomas, Daniel
To, Chun-Hao
Varga, Tamas Norbert
Weller, Jochen
Wilkinson, Reese
Source :
Phys. Rev. D 103, 123528 (2021)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We study a phenomenological class of models where dark matter converts to dark radiation in the low redshift epoch. This class of models, dubbed DMDR, characterizes the evolution of comoving dark matter density with two extra parameters, and may be able to help alleviate the observed discrepancies between early- and late-time probes of the universe. We investigate how the conversion affects key cosmological observables such as the CMB temperature and matter power spectra. Combining 3x2pt data from Year 1 of the Dark Energy Survey, {\it Planck}-2018 CMB temperature and polarization data, supernovae (SN) Type Ia data from Pantheon, and baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data from BOSS DR12, MGS and 6dFGS, we place new constraints on the amount of dark matter that has converted to dark radiation and the rate of this conversion. The fraction of the dark matter that has converted since the beginning of the universe in units of the current amount of dark matter, $\zeta$, is constrained at 68\% confidence level to be $<0.32$ for DES-Y1 3x2pt data, $<0.030$ for CMB+SN+BAO data, and $<0.037$ for the combined dataset. The probability that the DES and CMB+SN+BAO datasets are concordant increases from 4\% for the $\Lambda$CDM model to 8\% (less tension) for DMDR. The tension in $S_8 = \sigma_8 \sqrt{\Omega_{\rm m}/0.3}$ between DES-Y1 3x2pt and CMB+SN+BAO is slightly reduced from $2.3\sigma$ to $1.9\sigma$. We find no reduction in the Hubble tension when the combined data is compared to distance-ladder measurements in the DMDR model. The maximum-posterior goodness-of-fit statistics of DMDR and $\Lambda$CDM model are comparable, indicating no preference for the DMDR cosmology over $\Lambda$CDM.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures. DES extensions group. Accepted by PRD

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. D 103, 123528 (2021)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2011.04606
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.103.123528