Pushing the Limits of Detectability: Mixed Dark Matter from Strong Gravitational Lenses

Not scheduled
20m
305 (IBS Science and Culture Center)

305

IBS Science and Culture Center

Astroparticle physics Parallel: Astroparticle 2

Speaker

Ryan Keeley (UC Merced)

Description

One of the frontiers for advancing what is known about dark matter lies in using strong gravitational lenses to characterize the population of the smallest dark matter halos. There is a large volume of information in strong gravitational lens images so the question I seek to answer is to what extent can this information be refined. To this end, I will discuss recent forecasts of the detectability of a mixed warm and cold dark matter scenario using the anomalous flux ratio method from strong gravitational lensed images. The halo mass function of the mixed dark matter scenario is suppressed relative to cold dark matter but still predicts numerous low-mass dark matter halos relative to warm dark matter. Since the strong lens signal is a convolution over a range of dark matter halo masses and since the signal is sensitive to the specific configuration of dark matter halos, not just the halo mass function, degeneracies between different forms of suppression in the halo mass function, relative to cold dark matter, can arise. With a set of lenses with different configurations of the main deflector and hence different sensitivities to different mass ranges of the halo mass function, the different forms of suppression of the halo mass function between the warm dark matter model and the mixed dark matter model can be distinguished.

Secondary category for the parallel session (optional) Dark Matter Physics

Primary author

Ryan Keeley (UC Merced)

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