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      Large neutrino asymmetry from forbidden decay of dark matter

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          Abstract

          Dark matter (DM), in spite of being stable or long-lived on cosmological scales, can decay in the early Universe due to finite-temperature effects. In particular, a first order phase transition (FOPT) in the early Universe can provide a finite window for such decay, guaranteeing DM stability at lower temperatures, consistent with observations. The FOPT can lead to the generation of stochastic gravitational waves (GW) with peak frequencies correlated with DM mass. On the other hand, early DM decay into neutrinos can create a large neutrino asymmetry which can have interesting cosmological consequences in terms of enhanced effective relativistic degrees of freedom Neff, providing a solution to the recently observed Helium anomaly among others. Allowing DM decay to occur below sphaleron decoupling temperature, thereby avoiding overproduction of baryon asymmetry, forces the FOPT to occur at sub-electroweak scale. This leaves the stochastic GW within range of experiments like LISA, μARES, NANOGrav etc.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          30 September 2024
          Article
          2410.00096
          19e2e02a-d027-4535-b5e8-651523825cfc

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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          Custom metadata
          30 pages, 6 captioned figures
          hep-ph astro-ph.CO

          Cosmology & Extragalactic astrophysics,High energy & Particle physics
          Cosmology & Extragalactic astrophysics, High energy & Particle physics

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