TY - UNPB
T1 - Decaying Dark Matter and the Hubble Tension
AU - Nygaard, Andreas
AU - Holm, Emil Brinch
AU - Tram, Thomas
AU - Hannestad, Steen
N1 - Invited chapter for the edited book Hubble Constant Tension (Eds. E. Di Valentino and D. Brout, Springer Singapore, expected in 2024)
PY - 2023/7/1
Y1 - 2023/7/1
N2 - Decaying dark matter models generically modify the equation of state around the time of dark matter decay, and this in turn modifies the expansion rate of the Universe through the Friedmann equation. Thus, a priori, these models could solve or alleviate the Hubble tension, and depending on the lifetime of the dark matter, they can be classified as belonging to either the early- or late-time solutions. Moreover, decaying dark matter models can often be realized in particle physics models relatively easily. However, the implementations of these models in Einstein--Boltzmann solver codes are non-trivial, so not all incarnations have been tested. It is well known that models with very late decay of dark matter do not alleviate the Hubble tension, and in fact, cosmological data puts severe constraints on the lifetime of such dark matter scenarios. However, models in which a fraction of the dark matter decays to dark radiation at early times hold the possibility of modifying the effective equation of state around matter-radiation equality without affecting late-time cosmology. This scenario is therefore a simple realization of a possible early-time solution to the Hubble tension, and cosmological parameter estimation with current data in these models yields a value of $H_0 = 68.73^{+0.81}_{-1.3}$ at $68\%$ C.I.. This still leads to a $2.7\sigma$ Gaussian tension with the representative local value of $H_0 = 73.2 \pm 1.3$ km s$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-1}$. Additional work is, however, required to test more complex decay scenarios, which could potentially prefer higher values of $H_0$ and provide a better solution to the Hubble tension.
AB - Decaying dark matter models generically modify the equation of state around the time of dark matter decay, and this in turn modifies the expansion rate of the Universe through the Friedmann equation. Thus, a priori, these models could solve or alleviate the Hubble tension, and depending on the lifetime of the dark matter, they can be classified as belonging to either the early- or late-time solutions. Moreover, decaying dark matter models can often be realized in particle physics models relatively easily. However, the implementations of these models in Einstein--Boltzmann solver codes are non-trivial, so not all incarnations have been tested. It is well known that models with very late decay of dark matter do not alleviate the Hubble tension, and in fact, cosmological data puts severe constraints on the lifetime of such dark matter scenarios. However, models in which a fraction of the dark matter decays to dark radiation at early times hold the possibility of modifying the effective equation of state around matter-radiation equality without affecting late-time cosmology. This scenario is therefore a simple realization of a possible early-time solution to the Hubble tension, and cosmological parameter estimation with current data in these models yields a value of $H_0 = 68.73^{+0.81}_{-1.3}$ at $68\%$ C.I.. This still leads to a $2.7\sigma$ Gaussian tension with the representative local value of $H_0 = 73.2 \pm 1.3$ km s$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-1}$. Additional work is, however, required to test more complex decay scenarios, which could potentially prefer higher values of $H_0$ and provide a better solution to the Hubble tension.
KW - astro-ph.CO
KW - hep-ph
M3 - Preprint
BT - Decaying Dark Matter and the Hubble Tension
ER -