It was recently proposed that stable particles of charge −2, O--, can exist and constitute dark matter after they bind with primordial helium in O-helium (OHe) atoms. We study here in detail the possibility that this model
provides an explanation for the excess of gamma radiation in the positron-annihilation line from the galactic bulge observed by INTEGRAL.
This explanation assumes that OHe, excited to a 2s state through collisions in the central part of the Galaxy, deexcites to its ground state via an E0 transition, emitting an electron-positron pair. The cross-section for OHe collisions with excitation to 2s level is calculated and it is
shown that the rate of such excitations in the galactic bulge strongly depends not only on the mass of O-helium, which is determined by the mass
of O--, but also on the density and velocity distribution of dark matter. Given the astrophysical
uncertainties on these distributions, this mechanism constrains the O-- mass to lie in two possible regions. One of these is reachable in the experimental searches for stable multicharged particles at the LHC.
1. Introduction
According to modern cosmology, dark matter corresponds to 25% of the total cosmological density, is nonbaryonic, and consists of new stable particles. Such particles (see [1–6] for reviews and references) should be stable, provide the measured dark-matter density, and be decoupled from plasma and radiation at least before the beginning of the matter-dominated era. It was recently shown that heavy stable particles of charge -2, O--, bound to primordial helium in OHe atoms, can provide an interesting explanation for cosmological dark matter [6, 7]. It should also be noted that the nuclear cross-section of the O-helium interaction with matter escapes the severe constraints [8–10] on strongly interacting dark-matter particles (SIMPs) [8–16] imposed by the XQC experiment [17, 18].
The hypothesis of composite O-helium dark matter, first considered to provide a solution to the puzzles of direct dark-matter searches, can offer an explanation for another puzzle of modern astrophysics [6, 7, 19]: this composite dark-matter model can explain the excess of gamma radiation in the electron-positron-annihilation line, observed by INTEGRAL in the galactic bulge (see [20] for a review and references). The explanation assumes that OHe provides all the galactic dark matter and that its collisions in the central part of the Galaxy result in 2s-level excitations of OHe which are deexcited to the ground state by an E0 transition, in which an electron-positron pair is emitted. If the 2s level is excited, pair production dominates over the two-photon channel in the deexcitation, because electrons are much lighter than helium nuclei, and positron production is not accompanied by a strong gamma-ray signal.
According to [21] the rate of positron production 3·1042s-1 is sufficient to explain the excess in the positron-annihilation line from the bulge measured by INTEGRAL. In the present paper we study the process of 2s-level excitation of OHe from collisions in the galactic bulge and determine the conditions under which such collisions can provide the observed excess. Inelastic interactions of O-helium with matter in interstellar space and subsequent deexcitation can give rise to radiation in the range from a few keV to a few MeV. In the galactic bulge with radius rb~1kpc the number density of O-helium can be of the order of no≈3·10-3/S3cm-3 or larger, and the collision rate of O-helium in this central region was estimated in [19]: dN/dt=no2σvh4πrb3/3≈3·1042S3-2s-1, with S3=mOHe/1 TeV. At the velocity of vh~3·107cm/s energy transfer in such collisions is ΔE~1MeVS3. These collisions can lead to excitation of O-helium. If OHe levels with nonzero angular momentum are excited, gamma lines should be observed from transitions (n>m) Enm=1.598MeV(1/m2-1/n2) (or from similar transitions corresponding to the case Io=1.287MeV) at the level 3·10-4S3-2(cm2sMeVster)-1.
2. Collisional Excitation Cross-Section
The studied reaction is the collision between two OHe atoms, both being initially in their ground state |1s〉, giving rise to the excitation of one of them to a |ns〉 state while the other remains in its ground state:
(1)OHe(1s)+OHe(1s)⟶OHe(1s)+OHe(ns).
If we work in the rest frame of the OHe that gets excited and if we neglect its recoil after the collision, the differential cross-section of the process is given by
(2)dσ(1s⟶ns)=2π|〈ns,p→′|U|1s,p→〉|2×δ(p′22M+Ens-p22M-E1s)d3p′(2π)3,
where M is the mass of OHe, p→ and p→′ are the momenta of the incident OHe before and after the collision, E1s and Ens are the ground-state and excited-state energies of the target OHe, and U is the interaction potential between the incident and the target OHe’s.
We will neglect the internal structure of the incident OHe, so that its wave functions are plane waves. ψp→ is normalized to obtain a unit incident current density and the normalisation of ψp→′ is chosen for it to be pointlike, that is, the Fourier transform of δ(3)(r→) [22]:
(3)ψp→=Mpeip→·r→,ψp→′=eip→′·r→,
where r→ is the position vector of the incident OHe and p=|p→|.
In the following, we will be led to consider O-- masses which are much larger than the mass of helium or the bound-state energies. Therefore, the origin of the rest frame of the target OHe coincides with the position of its O-- component and its reduced mass μ can be taken as the mass of helium MHe.
The OHe that gets excited is described as a hydrogen-like atom, with energy levels Ens=-0.5MHe(ZHeZOα)2/n2 and initial and final bound-state wave functions ψ1s and ψns of a hydrogenoid atom with a Bohr radius a0=(MHeZHeZOα)-1.
The incident OHe interacts with the O-- and helium components in the target OHe, so that the interaction potential U is the sum of the two contributions UO and UHe:
(4)U(r→)=UO(r→)+UHe(r→-r→He),
where r→He is the position vector of the helium component.
The first term UO gives a zero contribution to the integral of expression (2) since the states ψ1s and ψns are orthogonal. For the second term, we treat the incident OHe as a heavy neutron colliding on a helium nucleus through short-range nuclear forces. The interaction potential can then be written in the form of a contact term:
(5)UHe(r→-r→He)=-2πMHea0δ(r→-r→He),
where we have normalised the delta function to obtain an OHe-helium elastic cross-section equal to 4πa02.
Going to spherical coordinates for p→′ and integrating over p′=|p→′| in the differential cross-section (2), together with the previous expressions (3), (4), and (5), we get
(6)dσ(1s⟶ns)=(MMHe)2a02(p′p)×|∫e-iq→.r→Heψns*ψ1sd3rHe|2dΩ,
where q→=p→′-p→ is the transferred momentum and dΩ is the solid angle. From the integration over the delta function in (2), we have obtained the conservation of energy during the process:
(7)p′2=p2+2M(E1s-Ens).
It leads to the threshold energy corresponding to p′2=0 and to a minimum incident velocity vmin=2(Ens-E1s)/M. The previous expression for p′ allows us to express the squared modulus of q→ as
(8)q2=2(p2+2M(E1-Ens)cosθp2+M(E1s-Ens)hh-pp2+2M(E1s-Ens)cosθ),
where θ is the deviation angle of the incident OHe with respect to the collision axis in the rest frame of the target OHe.
e+e- pairs will be dominantly produced if OHe is excited to a 2s state, since the only deexcitation channel is in this case from 2s to 1s. As e+e- pair production is the only possible channel, the differential pair-production cross-section dσee is equal to the differential collisional excitation cross-section. By particularizing expression (6) to the case n=2, one finally gets
(9)dσeedcosθ=5122(2πM2MHe2)a06(p′p)q42(4a02q2+9)6.
3. The e+e- Pair-Production Rate in the Galactic Bulge
The total e+e- pair-production rate in the galactic bulge is given by
(10)dNdt|ee=∫VbρDM2(R→)M2〈σeev〉(R→)dR→,
where Vb is the volume of the galactic bulge, which is a sphere of radius Rb=1.5 kpc, ρDM is the energy density distribution of dark matter in the galactic halo, and 〈σeev〉 is the pair-production cross-section σee times relative velocity v averaged over the velocity distribution of dark-matter particles. The total pair-production cross-section σee is obtained by integrating (9) over the diffusion angle. Its dependence on the relative velocity v is contained in p, p′, and q through p=Mv and the expressions (7) and (8) of p′ and q in terms of p.
We use a Burkert [23, 24] flat, cored, dark-matter density profile known to reproduce well the kinematics of disk systems in massive spiral galaxies and supported by recent simulations including supernova feedback and radiation pressure of massive stars [25] in response to the cuspy halo problem:
(11)ρDM(R)=ρ0R03(R+R0)(R2+R02),
where R is the distance from the galactic center. The central dark-matter density ρ0 is left as a free parameter and R0 is determined by requiring that the local dark-matter density at R=R⊙=8 kpc is ρ⊙=0.3 GeV/cm3. The dark-matter mass enclosed in a sphere of radius R is therefore given by
(12)MDM(R)=ρ0πR03{log(R2+R02R02)hhhhhh+2log(R+R0R0)-2arctan(RR0)(R2+R02R02)}.
For the baryons in the bulge, we use an exponential profile [26] of the form
(13)ρb(R)=Mbulge8πRb3e-R/Rb,
where Mbulge=1010M⊙ [27] is the mass of the bulge. This gives the baryonic mass distribution in the galactic bulge
(14)Mb(R)=Mbulge{1-e-R/Rb(1+RRb+R2Rb2)}.
We assume a Maxwell-Boltzmann velocity distribution for the dark-matter particles of the galactic halo, with a velocity dispersion u(R) and a cutoff at the galactic escape velocity vesc(R):
(15)f(R,v→h)=1C(R)e-vh2/u2(R),
where v→h is the velocity of the dark-matter particles in the frame of the halo and C(R)=πu2(πuerf(vesc/u)-2vesce-vesc2/u2) is a normalization constant such that ∫0vesc(R)f(R,v→h)dv→h=1.
The radial dependence of the velocity dispersion is obtained via the virial theorem:
(16)u(R)=GMtot(R)R,
where Mtot=MDM+Mb, while vesc=2u.
Using the velocity distribution (15), going to center-of-mass and relative velocities v→CM and v→, and performing the integrals over v→CM, we obtain for the mean pair-production cross-section times relative velocity
(17)〈σeev〉=1u22πuerf(2vesc/u)-4vesce-2vesc2/u2(πuerf(vesc/u)-2vesce-vesc2/u2)2×∫02vescσee(v)v3e-v2/2u2dv,
which is also a function of R through u and vesc. Putting (9), (11), (12), (14), (16), and (17) together allows us to compute the pair-production rate in the galactic bulge defined in (10) as a function of ρ0 and M.
4. Results
The rate of excessive e+e- pairs to be generated in the galactic bulge was estimated in [21] to be dN/dt|obs=3×1042 s−1. We computed dN/dt|ee for a large range of central dark-matter densities, going from 0.3 GeV/cm3 to an ultimate upper limit of 104 GeV/cm3 [28]. For each value of ρ0, we searched for the mass M of OHe that reproduces the observed rate. The results are shown in Figure 1.
Values of the central dark-matter density ρ0 (GeV/cm3) and of the OHe mass M (TeV) reproducing the excess of e+e- pairs production in the galactic bulge. Below the red curve, the predicted rate is too low.
The observed rate can be reproduced from a value of ρ0≃115 GeV/cm3, corresponding to an OHe mass of M≃1.25 TeV. As ρ0 gets larger, two values of M are possible, with the lower one going from 1.25 TeV to 130 GeV and the upper one going from 1.25 to 130 TeV as ρ0 goes from 115 to 104 GeV/cm3.
5. Conclusion
The existence of heavy stable particles is one of the most popular solutions for the dark- matter problem. Usually they are considered to be electrically neutral. But dark matter can potentially be made of stable heavy charged particles bound in neutral atom-like states by Coulomb attraction. An analysis of the cosmological data and of the atomic composition of the Universe forces the particle to have charge -2. O-- is then trapped by primordial helium in neutral O-helium states and this avoids the problem of overproduction of anomalous isotopes, which are severely constrained by observations. Here we have shown that the cosmological model of O-helium dark matter can explain the puzzle of positron line emission from the center of our Galaxy.
The proposed explanation is based on the assumption that OHe dominates the dark-matter sector. Its collisions can lead to E0 deexcitations of the 2s states excited by the collisions. The estimated luminosity in the electron-positron-annihilation line strongly depends not only on the mass of O-- but also on the density profile and velocity distribution of dark matter in the galactic bulge. Note that the density profile we considered is used only to obtain a reasonable estimate for the uncertainties on the density in the bulge. It indeed underestimates the mass of the Galaxy, but it shows that the uncertainties on the astrophysical parameters are large enough to reproduce the observed excess for a rather wide range of masses of O--. For a fixed density profile and a fixed velocity distribution, only two values of the O-- mass lead to the necessary rate of positron production. The lower value of this mass, which does not exceed 1.25 TeV, is within the reach of experimental searches for multicharged stable heavy particles at the LHC.
Conflict of Interests
The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.
Acknowledgment
The authors express their gratitude to A. S. Romaniouk for discussions.
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