Superheavy dark matter
- 25 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 59 (2) , 023501
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.59.023501
Abstract
We show that in large-field inflationary scenarios, superheavy (many orders of magnitude larger than the weak scale) dark matter will be produced in cosmologically interesting quantities if superheavy stable particles exist in the mass spectrum. We show that these particles may be produced naturally during the transition from the inflationary phase to either a matter-dominated or radiation-dominated phase as a result of the expansion of the background spacetime acting on vacuum quantum fluctuations of the dark matter field. We find that as long as there are stable particles whose mass is of the order of the inflaton mass (presumably around ), they will be produced in sufficient abundance to give quite independently of any details of the nongravitational interactions of the dark-matter field.
Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Universe after inflation: the wide resonance casePublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Gauge-mediated SUSY breaking at an intermediate scalePhysical Review D, 1997
- Relic gravitational waves produced after preheatingPhysical Review D, 1997
- Preheating, Supersymmetry Breaking, and BaryogenesisPhysical Review Letters, 1996
- Unitarity limits on the mass and radius of dark-matter particlesPhysical Review Letters, 1990
- Gravitational particle production in inflation. A fresh lookPhysics Letters B, 1990
- Massive particle production in anisotropic space-timesJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1980
- Path-integral quantization and cosmological particle production: An examplePhysical Review D, 1977
- Pair creation in expanding universesPhysical Review D, 1975
- Error bounds for the Liouville–Green (or WKB) approximationMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1961