Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1848911 Physics Letters B 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The amount of decaying dark matter, accumulated in the central regions in neutron stars together with the energy deposition rate from decays, may set a limit on the neutron star survival rate against transitions to more compact objects provided nuclear matter is not the ultimate stable state of matter and that dark matter indeed is unstable. More generally, this limit sets constraints on the dark matter particle decay time, τχτχ. We find that in the range of uncertainties intrinsic to such a scenario, masses (mχ/TeV)≳9×10−4(mχ/TeV)≳9×10−4 or (mχ/TeV)≳5×10−2(mχ/TeV)≳5×10−2 and lifetimes τχ≲1055 sτχ≲1055 s and τχ≲1053 sτχ≲1053 s can be excluded in the bosonic or fermionic decay cases, respectively, in an optimistic estimate, while more conservatively, it decreases τχτχ by a factor ≳1020≳1020. We discuss the validity under which these results may improve with other current constraints.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Nuclear and High Energy Physics
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