ETHOS ‐ an effective theory of structure formation: Impact of dark acoustic oscillations on cosmic dawn
Author(s)
Muñoz, Julian B.; Bohr, Sebastian; Cyr-Racine, Francis-Yan; Zavala, Jesús; Vogelsberger, Mark
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Upcoming data of the 21-cm hydrogen line during cosmic dawn (z∼10–30) will revolutionize our understanding of the astrophysics of the first galaxies. Here we present a case study on how to exploit those same measurements to learn about the nature of dark matter (DM) at small scales. Focusing on the effective theory of structure formation (ETHOS) paradigm, we run a suite of simulations covering a broad range of DM microphysics, connecting the output of N-body simulations to dedicated 21-cm simulations to predict the evolution of the 21-cm signal across the entire cosmic dawn. We find that observatories targeting both the global signal and the 21-cm power spectrum are sensitive to all ETHOS models we study, and can distinguish them from CDM if the suppression wave number is smaller than k≈300 h/Mpc, even when accounting for feedback with a phenomenological model. This is an order of magnitude smaller comoving scales than currently constrained by other datasets, including the Lyman-α forest. Moreover, if a prospective 21-cm detection confirmed a deficiency of power at small scales, we show that ETHOS models with strong dark acoustic oscillations can be discriminated from the pure suppression of warm dark matter, showing the power of 21-cm data to understand the behavior of DM at the smallest physical scales.
Date issued
2021-02Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics; MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space ResearchJournal
Physical Review D
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Phys. Rev. D 103, 043512 (2021)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2470-0010
2470-0029