Files

Abstract

Thermal relic dark matter below0 $∼10  GeV$ is excluded by cosmic microwave background data if its annihilation to visible particles is unsuppressed near the epoch of recombination. Usual model-building measures to avoid this bound involve kinematically suppressing the annihilation rate in the low-velocity limit, thereby yielding dim prospects for indirect detection signatures at late times. In this work, we investigate a class of cosmologically viable sub-GeV thermal relics with late-time annihilation rates that are detectable with existing and proposed telescopes across a wide range of parameter space. We study a representative model of inelastic dark matter featuring a stable state $𝜒_1$ and a slightly heavier excited state $𝜒_2$ whose abundance is thermally depleted before recombination. Since the kinetic energy of dark matter in the Milky Way is much larger than it is during recombination, $𝜒_1⁢𝜒_1→𝜒_2⁢𝜒_2$ upscattering can efficiently regenerate a cosmologically long-lived Galactic population of $𝜒_2$, whose subsequent coannihilations with $𝜒_1$ give rise to observable gamma-rays in the $∼1  MeV−100  MeV$ energy range. We find that proposed MeV gamma-ray telescopes, such as e-ASTROGAM, AMEGO, and MAST, would be sensitive to much of the thermal relic parameter space in this class of models and thereby enable both discovery and model discrimination in the event of a signal at accelerator or direct detection experiments.

Details

Actions

PDF

from
to
Export
Download Full History