Date:
24. March 2017 - 11:30
Speaker:
Kallia Petraki (LPTHE, Paris)
Dark matter with long-range interactions, mediated by a light or
massless force carrier, appears in a variety of theories with
different motivation. Examples include the self-interacting dark
matter scenario, which is motivated by the observed galactic
structure, as well as models constructed to explain observed
astrophysical signals. Notably, even the Weak interactions of the
Standard Model exhibit long-range behaviour if the interacting
particles are heavier than a few TeV. An important implication of
long-range interactions is the existence of bound states. I will
describe some implications of the formation of dark-matter bound
states in the early universe and inside haloes today, and put them in
the context of the cosmology and phenomenology of a dark U(1) sector.



