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Constraining Ultralight Axions with Galaxy Surveys

Published 15 Apr 2021 in astro-ph.CO | (2104.07802v3)

Abstract: Ultralight axions and other bosons are dark matter candidates present in many high energy physics theories beyond the Standard Model. In particular, the string axiverse postulates the existence of up to $\mathcal{O}(100)$ light scalar bosons constituting the dark sector. Considering a mixture of axions and cold dark matter, we obtain upper bounds for the axion relic density $\Omega_a h2 < 0.004$ for axions of mass $10{-31}\;\mathrm{eV}\leq m_a \leq 10{-26}\;\mathrm{eV}$ at 95% confidence. We also improve existing constraints by a factor of over 4.5 and 2.1 for axion masses of $10{-25}$ eV and $10{-32}$ eV, respectively. We use the Fourier-space galaxy clustering statistics from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) and demonstrate how galaxy surveys break important degeneracies in the axion parameter space compared to the cosmic microwave background (CMB). We test the validity of the effective field theory of large-scale structure approach to mixed ultralight axion dark matter by making our own mock galaxy catalogs and find an anisotropic ultralight axion signature in the galaxy quadrupole. We also observe an enhancement of the linear galaxy bias from 1.8 to 2.4 when allowing for 5% of the dark matter to be composed of a $10{-28}$ eV axion in our simulations. Finally, we develop an augmented interpolation scheme allowing a fast computation of the axion contribution to the linear matter power spectrum leading to a 70% reduction of the computational cost for the full Monte Carlo Markov chains analysis.

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