Friday, April 21, 2023

Dark Matter Phenomena Is More Wave-Like Than Particle-Like

Overview

A new paper uses a novel approach to show that dark matter phenomena is more wave-like than particle-like. It is important because it generically rules out huge swaths of the dark matter parameter space with a single set of observations.

The authors argue that this favors axion-like particle dark matter over WIMP-like dark matter without considering gravitational based sources of dark matter phenomena or other dark  matter candidates of intermediate masses. But gravitational based sources of dark matter would also be more wave-like than particle-like. 

Since the paper doesn't consider middle ground between 10^-22 eV mass axion-like dark matter particles which it models, and WIMPs of more than 10 GeV, it doesn't map out the parameter space bounds that its Einstein Ring lensing observations themselves impose, instead merely comparing two hypotheses.

My analysis below supposes a cutoff of 10 keV common associated with warm dark matter theories, because warm dark matter particle theories claim to start to overcome observational failures to cold dark matter particle theories precisely because it is at that mass scale that wave-like behavior starts to emerge.

Dark Matter Candidates More Massive Than 10 keV Are Ruled Out

This result generically disfavors dark matter candidates more massive than warm dark matter (in the single digit keV mass range), which is the most massive dark matter candidate to exhibit significant wave-like behavior. It also tilts the balance towards even lighter masses than warm dark matter, while disfavoring cold dark matter candidates in the WIMP mass range of about 1 GeV to 1000 GeV, let alone even more massive dark matter candidates that aren't effectively screened with direct dark matter detection experiments or primordial black holes. 

As the introduction to the paper notes, WIMPs (defined in the paper as having at least a 10 GeV particle mass), were already in trouble as a hypothesis:
The lightest among the stable WIMPs has long been heralded as the most likely candidate for CDM. Laboratory searches, however, have failed to detect WIMPs through direct-detection or in collider experiments. Cosmological simulations employing massive bodies to stand in for WIMPs have been highly successful at predicting the large scale structure of the universe, but face enduring problems on galactic or sub-galactic scales (< 10 kpc), the best documented of which are the “missing satellite” (along with the related “too big to fail”) and “cusp versus core” problems.
This result even largely rules out already non-viable dark matter candidates like the hypothetical X17 boson which at 17 MeV would be far too massive to have significantly wave-like behavior, in addition to being far too short lived.

Thermal Freeze Out Candidates Other Than Warm Dark Matter Are Ruled Out

Dark matter particle candidates lighter than warm dark matter (i.e. basically below 1 keV or so), since they can't be thermal freeze out dark matter particle candidates, need to be in some sort of dynamic equilibrium in which particles with very slight kinetic energy per particle are created and destroyed at the same rate. This is necessary to reflect the apparently roughly constant amount of dark matter in the universe suggested by the approximate fit of the LambdaCDM model to the astronomy data.

Since dark matter particle candidates in a thermal freeze out scenario get too "hot" (i.e. have too fast of a mean velocity) to be consistent with the amount of galaxy scale structure in the universe, any thermal freeze out dark matter candidate other than warm dark matter is essentially ruled out. 

Colder thermal freeze out dark matter candidates are ruled out because they are insufficiently wave-like.

There are other tensions with observation for warm dark matter candidates as well, many of which are shared with cold dark matter candidates, even though warm dark matter particle candidates can overcome some challenges including this one.

New Higher Energy Colliders Won't Find Dark Matter Candidates

Another important consequence of this paper is that higher energy particle colliders, which could potentially reveal beyond the Standard Model particles more massive than hundreds of GeVs, almost certainly won't reveal any new viable dark matter candidates, even if new particles are discovered in these colliders. 

Existing particle colliders are plenty powerful enough to comb the dark matter particle mass range that this study leaves in the running from zero rest mass to about 10 keV. 

The issue in this light particle mass range is escaping noise in experiments from the neutrino background to be able to see a hypothetical dark matter particle signal, not insufficient particle accelerator energy. 

Prospects For Further Research

Presumably, however, a deeper and more generalized analysis of the same data could discern whether some of the higher end of the mass range below 10 keV is also ruled out by the Einstein Ring observations.

In particular, if the Einstein Ring observations ruled out dark matter particle masses of 10 eV or more, all of the viable parameter space for sterile neutrino dark matter and warm dark matter hypotheses discussed below could be ruled out. An analysis along these lines would be a very valuable scientific contribution in service of the cause of narrowing the observationally permitted dark matter parameter space, that could extend the results of this paper with essentially the same data. This result, if established, would also completely rule out the thermal dark matter parameter space.

If this mass range was excluded, it would effectively push the parameter space for dark matter particles to below the meV order of magnitude mass range inhabited by Standard Model neutrinos. And, since we know that dark matter cannot be "hot" (i.e. have high mean particle velocity) based upon the scale of galactic structure, these particles would not only have to have a low rest mass, but would also have to have, unlike most observed neutrinos, exceeding low amounts of kinetic energy per particle (i.e. many orders of magnitude lower in mass-energy than the rest mass of the particle itself).

Standard Model Dark Matter Candidates Are Ruled Out

Hadronic Dark Matter Is Ruled Out

But high energy physics experiments have pretty well scoured nature for subatomic particles with masses of less than hundred of GeVs. The lightest hadron, the pion, is about 139 MeV (far to massive to be wave-like in addition to being too short lived). Particles with strong force color charge (i.e. quarks and gluons) are always confined in hadrons at temperatures below those that were last present in nature shortly after the Big Bang. Even the lightest quark, at about 2.5 MeV, is too massive to pass this test. While gluons theoretically have zero rest mass, their confinement into hadrons at the temperatures that have been present for the last 99.999999999999% of the universe or more, including all astronomy observations supporting the dark matter hypothesis also rule out free gluons. Also, of course, no hadrons but protons and bound neutrons are stable.

The motivation to look for ultra-heavy stable hadrons in some "island of stability" contrary to all existing indications that any heavier hadrons than those seen to date would be extremely unstable, is also undermined by the fact that any newly discovered heavy hadrons would be too massive to have predominantly wave-like behavior.

Non-Neutrino Standard Model Dark Matter Candidates Are Ruled Out

The W boson, Z boson and Higgs boson are all, of course, far too short lived and far too massive to fit the bill.

Charged leptons are obviously not dark matter candidates. Even electrons at 511 keV, in addition to being ruled out for being charged particles, are also perhaps fifty times too massive to be wave-like in the sense of this new paper's astronomy observations. The heavier muons (about 105 MeV) and tau leptons (about 1776 MeV) are also charged, are an even more poor fit due to their greater mass, and also aren't stable.

The only Standard Model particle less massive than a neutrino is the photon. A photon is stable and has zero rest mass, but we know cannot be dark matter because it is not, of course, "dark" and the aggregate amount of radiation in the universe (i.e. energy tied up in photons) is far too small to account for observed dark matter phenomena. 

Standard Model Neutrino Dark Matter Is Ruled Out

We know that dark matter is not due to Standard Model neutrinos (because it would be too "hot" and because there aren't enough neutrinos in the universe to fit the model). Also, robust cosmology estimates establish that there are only the three Standard Model  neutrino species with masses of 10 eV or less mass. 

Sterile Neutrino Dark Matter Has A Narrow Window And Is Disfavored

The experimental neutrino physics data and the observations of dark matter phenomena dynamics tends to disfavor "sterile" neutrinos, although there could be a window for sterile neutrino dark matter with particle masses greater than 10 eV and less than about 10 keV, considering this paper alone, and oscillations with ordinary neutrinos could provide a low energy dynamic process to maintain a constant aggregate mass of sterile neutrinos in the universe since a thermal freeze out mechanism wouldn't work in that mass range. There is, however, basically no credible and replicated experimental evidence for sterile neutrinos in this mass range.

If the sterile neutrino mass were below about 10 eV, this would show up in cosmology parameter estimations as addition effective numbers of neutrino species, which are robustly limited by astronomy observations to exactly three (plus an adjustment that leaves N(eff) as a non-integer value). So, light sterile neutrino species are ruled out.

But, if the sterile neutrino mass were more than 10 keV, the non-wave-like nature of the particle would rule it out based upon the Einstein Ring data.

Conjectures About Gravitons And Axions

The paper basically lumps all dark matter particle candidates with masses of much less than 1 eV into the axion-like particle category with preference for a particle mass of about 10^-22 eV. 

The introduction sums up evidence about the possible mass of axion-like particle dark matter:
While cosmological simulations involving both ϱDM and ψDM predict the same large-scale structure for the universe, ψDM naturally gives rise to characteristics observed among galaxies that pose as problems for ϱDM. 

For instance, ϱDM halos are predicted to increase dramatically in abundance toward lower masses until the Jeans limit at roughly 10^3 M, thus giving rise to the missing satellite problem. By contrast, ψDM halos are predicted to be increasingly suppressed below masses of ∼ 10^10(mψ/10^−22 eV)^−4/3 M until a cutoff at ∼ 10^7 (mψ/10^−22 eV)^−3/2 M. 

The suppression of relatively low-mass ψDM halos in the early universe provide an explanation for the apparent turnover in the abundance of galaxies toward lower luminosities at high redshifts (large cosmological distances). For mφ ∼ 10^−22 eV, λdB ranges from ∼100 pc in massive galaxies (Mh ∼ 10^11–10^12 M ) to ∼1 kpc in dwarf galaxies (Mh ∼ 10^9 M ), thus imposing a sizeable ψDM solitonic core in, especially, low-mass galaxies. 

The presence of solitonic cores explains why dwarf galaxies do not exhibit a cusp, a problem that can be circumvented in ϱDM only for relatively massive galaxies by appealing to feedback from star formation. 

In addition, the recently reported transition in stellar density at a radius of ∼1 kpc in local dwarf galaxies provides direct evidence for a solitonic core in these galaxies. 

Finally, a ψDM halo featuring a solitonic core can reproduce the flat stellar velocity dispersion of the ultra-diffuse galaxy DF44 that extends to about 3 kpc.
There is one almost Standard Model hypothetical particle that has strongly wave-like behavior which isn't ruled out, which is the zero rest mass graviton. 

The combined mass-energy of a graviton has been estimated, and is strikingly similar to the sweet spot for an axion-like particle dark matter mass.
The graviton's Compton wavelength is at least 1.6×10^16 m, or about 1.6 light-years, corresponding to a graviton mass of no more than 7.7×10^−23 eV/c^2.
One could say, in a quantum gravity based gravitational explanation for dark matter phenomena that dark matter (and dark energy) are basically just due to gravitons because gravity is just due to gravitons. 

Perhaps there are non-perturbative quantum gravity effects that Einstein's field equations don't capture, or the conventional GR scholarship has overlooked that could reproduce this result.

My intuition is that axion-like particle dark matter theories (which is not well motivated because the original axion motivated by a desire to explain the lack of CP-violation in the strong force has many other good explanations and doesn't really even require an explanation), to the extent that they can fit the data, do so because they have per particle mass-energy in the same ballpark as hypothetical gravitons. 

The Paper

The paper and its abstract are as follows:
Unveiling the true nature of dark matter, which manifests itself only through gravity, is one of the principal quests in physics. Leading candidates for dark matter are weakly interacting massive particles or ultralight bosons (axions), at opposite extremes in mass scales, that have been postulated by competing theories to solve deficiencies in the Standard Model of particle physics. Whereas dark matter weakly interacting massive particles behave like discrete particles (ϱDM), quantum interference between dark matter axions is manifested as waves (ψDM). 
Here, we show that gravitational lensing leaves signatures in multiply lensed images of background galaxies that reveal whether the foreground lensing galaxy inhabits a ϱDM or ψDM halo. Whereas ϱDM lens models leave well documented anomalies between the predicted and observed brightnesses and positions of multiply lensed images, ψDM lens models correctly predict the level of anomalies remaining with ϱDM lens models. 
More challengingly, when subjected to a battery of tests for reproducing the quadruply lensed triplet images in the system HS 0810+2554, ψDM is able to reproduce all aspects of this system whereas ϱDM often fails. The ability of ψDM to resolve lensing anomalies even in demanding cases such as HS 0810+2554, together with its success in reproducing other astrophysical observations, tilt the balance toward new physics invoking axions.
Alfred Amruth, "Einstein rings modulated by wavelike dark matter from anomalies in gravitationally lensed images" Nature Astronomy (April 20, 2023) https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-023-01943-9 (Open access copy available at arxiv). 

9 comments:

neo said...

This result even largely rules out already non-viable dark matter candidates like the hypothetical X17 boson which at 17 MeV would be far too massive to have significantly wave-like behavior, in addition to being far too short lived.


High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
arXiv:2304.09877 (hep-ph)
[Submitted on 19 Apr 2023]
Neutrino Constraints and the ATOMKI X17 Anomaly
Peter B. Denton, Julia Gehrlein

We find that
one should consider one of the following three scenarios
to achieve a viable model:
1. A flavor non-universal U (1)X model without the in-
troduction of new fermions or an anomalous U (1)B
scenario which requires additional quarks to cancel
the anomalies.
2. A U (1)B−L scenario that explains neutrino masses
with an additional heavy neutrino at 50 GeV <

mν4
<
∼ 60 GeV and large mixing consistent with the8
gallium anomaly, but in tension with solar neutri-
nos. Additionally a Majorana neutrino with MeV-
GeV mass is predicted which can be tested with
upcoming experiments.
3. A U (1)B−L scenario with an additional heavy neu-
trino at mν4
>
∼ 135 GeV and large B − L charges.
Additional more involved models are likely possible as
well, see e.g. [105, 106].
V. CONCLUSIONS
ATOMKI has reported several measurements that in-



X17 probably imply that more particles exists to cancel gauge anomalies as part of a hidden sector

neo said...

Alternatively, a U (1)B model could be introduced
which is however anomalous [14]. In this scenario the
new boson (which will become the 17 MeV X state) mixes
with the photon allowing for different εp and εn. There
is a body of literature on the additional particle content
required to cancel anomalies; any such method can be
applied [69–77].
2


2. Anomaly Free U (1)B−L
If one chooses to avoid an anomalous model but wants
to make use of an accidental global symmetry of the SM
like baryon number or B − L, we quantitatively present
here an anomaly free model that allows for different εp
and εn in the same way as in the U (1)B model. To be con-
crete, we focus on a broken U (1)B−L model as described
in [14] which immediately leads to εp 6 = εn = −ενe via
a kinetic mixing between the new boson (which will be-
come the 17 MeV X state) and the photon as in the
U (1)B model above. We update this model to comply
with additional neutrino constraints which leads to two
possible ways of proceeding. Mass in the dark sector is
generated via a new B − L Higgs boson with a vev of 3.4
GeV that gives mass to X.
Since we need |εν | much smaller than εn, we again
follow [14] with the suggested extension of including an
additional vectorlike leptonic SU (2)L doublet. After di-
agonalizing the mass matrix of the various neutrinos, we
find that the remaining contribution to the neutrino cou-
pling to X is
εν = −εn cos 2θ , (2)
where θ is the mixing between the active neutrino and the
new vectorlike neutrino ν4. Thus we require |1 − tan θ| <
5 × 10−4 to be consistent with neutrino scattering data
which implies a fairly specific relation between seemingly
unrelated parameters in the model. The mixing angle
depends on the number of new fermions and their masses.
For N new neutrinos their masses must be given by this
expression:
√tan θ =
( 60 GeV
mν4
) ( 0.006
|εn|
) ( √N λ

)
' 1 , (3)

where the coupling λ between the active neutrino and the
ν4 state mediated by the new Higgs boson can be as large
as 4π. Smaller values of λ lead to smaller physical masses
mν4 . This implies that we must have a new neutrino with
a mass <
∼ 60 GeV.
This new state cannot be lighter than mZ /2 [78], it
must be heavier than ∼ 50 GeV, otherwise it would con-
tribute to the well measured Z width. In addition, since
the mixing angle with the light neutrino needs to be very
close to 45◦, this predicts very large unitary violation
of the νe row of the measurable 3 × 3 PMNS matrix.
This can be constrained by comparing theoretical pre-
dictions for the reactor, solar, or radioactive source neu-
trino fluxes. The measurement of 7Be neutrinos is in
good agreement on the flux which, combined with shape
information from KamLAND [79] provides a fairly direct
constraint on the unitarity of the νe row at the few %
level. Reactor neutrinos had a hint of a ∼ 10% deviation
between the theoretical prediction and the measurement
[80], although careful measurements of the relative fluxes
from different isotopes indicate that a nuclear physics
issue may explain this tension [81, 82]. Finally, there
exists an unresolved tension in the comparison of the ex-
pected rate of neutrinos from 37Ar and 51Cr decays and
the measurements [83–89] which seems to predict quite
large mixing at the ∼ 40% level, although in tension with
solar results.
The stro

andrew said...

Sorry. X17 is a total bust. It hasn't been replicated and it won't be replicated because the problem is bad analysis.

neo said...

Sorry. X17 is a total bust. It hasn't been replicated and it won't be replicated because the problem is bad analysis.


High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
arXiv:2304.09877 (hep-ph)
[Submitted on 19 Apr 2023]
Neutrino Constraints and the ATOMKI X17 Anomaly
Peter B. Denton, Julia Gehrlein


Turning now to our numerical analysis. The ATOMKI
data is compelling because there is a fairly self-consistent
picture of new physics at ∼ 17 MeV coupling to pro-
tons and/or neutrons and electrons from data from dif-
ferent angular distributions, widths, and elements. The
ATOMKI data comes in two dimensions: the angle at
which the e+e− excess over the background begins, and
the rate leading to the excess.

For the angular data we use the data from [3, 4, 38] as
extracted in [39] including three measurements with He,
four measurements with Be, and four measurements with
C, see fig. 1. For the width data we use [40] for the Be
data, [4] for the C data, and [3] for the He data. For the
He data we also include the theory uncertainty on ΓE0
[41], the width normalization used for He coming from
the 0+ → 0+ transition.
We perform a simple statistical χ2 test of all the data
from multiple experimental runs of each of the three ele-
ments including width and angular information to com-
pute the preferred parameters and the internal goodness-
of-fit of the model using the procedure outlined in [17].
We do not perform a model comparison test between new
physics and the Standard Model as this requires more in-
timate knowledge of the experimental details and since
new physics is preferred over no new physics at very high
significance 5σ.
An analysis with the angular data alone of 11 differ-
ent measurements finds that the data is well described
by a new particle of mass mX = 16.85 ± 0.04 MeV with
an internal goodness-of-fit of 1.8σ calculated from Wilks’
theorem at χ2/dof = 17.3/10. We use only the best fit
and uncertainty of the maximum of the angular distribu-
tion; a more complete angular distribution might slightly
modify the results due to fluctuations in the data. The
data is compatible with the expected signature from a
∼ 17 MeV mediator, so we find it unlikely that this will
significantly shift the results. The angular distributions
are only sensitive to the mass of the particle which makes
it a useful starting point in analyzing the ATOMKI mea-
surements.
Next, we add in to the analysis the latest width in-
formation from each element and include a prior on εp
since X needs to couple to protons and/or neutrons
on the production size. There is a stronger constraint
on the coupling of X to protons from measurements of
π0 decays than the constraint on the coupling to neu-
trons.


Peter B. Denton
Brookhaven National Lab
Verified email at bnl.gov - Homepage
Neutrino TheoryNeutrinoParticle Physics

Education: Vanderbilt University, Rice University
Affiliation: Brookhaven National Laboratory
Research interests: Neutrino Theory, Neutrino, Particle Physics

Brookhaven Lab's Julia Gehrlein Wins Fundamental ...
Brookhaven National Laboratory (.gov)
https://www.bnl.gov › newsroom › news
Julia Gehrlein from www.bnl.gov
Julia Gehrlein is a member of the High Energy Theory Group, part of the Physics Department at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Julia Gehrlein, a research .

neo said...

Sorry. X17 is a total bust. It hasn't been replicated

arXiv:2301.08768 (nucl-ex)
[Submitted on 20 Jan 2023 (v1), last revised *25 Jan 2023* (this version, v2)]


A new direct detection electron scattering experiment to search for the X17 particle
D. Dutta (1), H. Gao (2), A. Gasparian (3), T. J. Hague (3 and 4)

A new electron scattering experiment (E12-21-003) to verify and understand the nature of hidden sector particles, with particular emphasis on the so-called X17 particle, has been approved at Jefferson Lab. The search for these particles is motivated by new hidden sector models introduced to account for a variety of experimental and observational puzzles: excess in e+e− pairs observed in multiple nuclear transitions, the 4.2σ disagreement between experiments and the standard model prediction for the muon anomalous magnetic moment, and the small-scale structure puzzle in cosmological simulations. The aforementioned X17 particle has been hypothesized to account for the excess in e+e− pairs observed from the 8Be M1, 4He M0, and, most recently, 12



A Time Projection Chamber to Search for Feebly Interacting Bosons via Proton Induced Nuclear Reactions

Martin Sevior(
Melbourne U.

*Feb 26, 2023*
26 pages
e-Print: 2302.13281 [hep-ex]

Abstract: (arXiv)
We propose a new Time Projection Chamber particle detector (TPC) to search for the existence of feebly-interacting bosons and to investigate the existence of the X17 boson, proposed by the ATOMKI group to explain anomalous results in the angular distributions of electron-positron pairs created in proton-induced nuclear reactions. Our design will provide 200 times greater sensitivity than ATOMKI and the program of research will also provide world-leading limits on feebly interacting bosons in the mass range of 5 - 25 MeV.
Note:

26 pages, 16 figures, 2 tables

might be a while to get the results :/

andrew said...

@neo

I'm well aware that new experiments that would examine this hypothesis are in the works (as the papers cited in your second comment note).

I saw, but did not post about the paper in your first comment. The quoted statement that "We do not perform a model comparison test between new physics and the Standard Model as this requires more intimate knowledge of the experimental details" is particularly damning, however, as is the failure of its authors to engage with publications which has proposed SM explanations for the phenomena described by the ATOMKI group. See, e.g., https://dispatchesfromturtleisland.blogspot.com/2020/08/new-analysis-disfavors-x17-particle.html Also https://arxiv.org/abs/2206.14441 (a proposed rather exotic QCD explanation with no new particles), https://arxiv.org/abs/2104.13342 (experimentally ruling out X17 based upon independent data), https://arxiv.org/abs/2102.01127 (SM explanation mostly due to ignoring non-leading order effect and acceptance bias in the data collection)

neo said...

https://arxiv.org/abs/2104.13342

"We report the results of a search for a light pseudoscalar particle a that couples to electrons and decays to e+e− performed using the high-energy CERN SPS H4 electron beam. If such pseudoscalar with a mass ≃17 MeV exists, it could explain the ATOMKI anomaly."

light pseudoscalar particle isn't the only explanation for x17

arXiv:2212.06453 (hep-ph)
[Submitted on 13 Dec 2022]
An updated view on the ATOMKI nuclear anomalies
Daniele Barducci, Claudio Toni

Our conclusions identify the axial vector state as the most promising candidate, while other spin/parity assignments seems disfavored for a combined explanation. Intriguingly, an axial vector state can also simultaneously accommodate other experimental anomalies, {\emph{i.e.}} the KTeV anomaly in π0→e+e− decay while being compatible with the conflicting measurements of the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron (g−2)e and other constraints on the electron couplings of the X boson.

neo said...

arXiv:2206.14441 (hep-ph)
[Submitted on 29 Jun 2022 (v1), last revised 17 Jul 2022 (this version, v2)]
Quantum Chromodynamics Resolution of the ATOMKI Anomaly in 4He Nuclear Transitions
Valery Kubarovsky, Jennifer Rittenhouse West, Stanley J. Brodsky

"In light of this work, we emphasize the need for independent experimental confirmation or refutation of the ATOMKI results as well as further experiments to detect the proposed new excitation of 4He. "

as of 2023 work in progress

neo said...

arXiv:2008.11288 (hep-ph)
[Submitted on 25 Aug 2020 (v1), last revised 26 Jan 2021 (this version, v2)]
Can a protophobic vector boson explain the ATOMKI anomaly?
Xilin Zhang, Gerald A. Miller

This contradicts the experimental observations and invalidates the protophobic vector boson explanation.

arXiv:2212.06453 (hep-ph)
[Submitted on 13 Dec 2022]
An updated view on the ATOMKI nuclear anomalies
Daniele Barducci, Claudio Toni

Our conclusions identify the axial vector state as the most promising candidate, while other spin/parity assignments seems disfavored for a combined explanation. Intriguingly, an axial vector state can also simultaneously accommodate other experimental anomalies, {\emph{i.e.}} the KTeV anomaly in π0→e+e− decay while being compatible with the conflicting measurements of the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron (g−2)e and other constraints on the electron couplings of the X boson.

vector boson explanation isn't an axial vector state