Probing the Small Scale Matter Power Spectrum through Dark Matter Annihilation in the Early Universe

2015 
Recent observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies and the distribution of galaxies, galaxy clusters, and the Lyman Alpha forest have constrained the shape of the power spectrum of matter fluctuations on large scales k /m is the annihilation rate assumed constant, and m is the particle mass. We assume the standard scale-invariant primordial matter power spectrum of P_prim(k) ~ k^{n_s} at large scales k n_s, the excess small-scale power results in a much larger number of nonlinear small mass halos, particularly at high redshifts. Dark matter annihilation in these halos releases sufficient energy to partially ionize the gas, and consequently modify the spectrum of CMB fluctuations. We show that the recent Planck data can already be used to constrain the power spectrum on small scales. For a simple model with an NFW profile with halo concentration parameter c_200 = 5 and f / m = 1/100 picobarn c / GeV, we can limit the mass variance sigma_{max} < 100 at the 95% confidence level, corresponding to a power law index m_s < 1.43 (1.63) for k_p = 100 (1000) h/Mpc. Our results are also relevant to theories that feature a running spectral index.
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