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CCAPP Seminar: Julia Gehrlein (BNL)

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October 8, 2021
11:45AM - 12:45PM
Zoom Virtual Seminar

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Add to Calendar 2021-10-08 11:45:00 2021-10-08 12:45:00 CCAPP Seminar: Julia Gehrlein (BNL) Speaker: Julia Gehrlein Connecting the Extremes: A Story of Supermassive Black Holes and Ultralight Dark Matter The formation of ultra rare supermassive black holes (SMBHs), with masses of O(10^9M⊙), in the first billion years of the Universe remains an open question in astrophysics. At the same time, ultralight dark matter (DM) with mass in the vicinity of O(10^(−20) eV) has been motivated by small scale DM distributions. Though this type of DM is constrained by various astrophysical considerations, certain observations could be pointing to modest evidence for it. We present a model with a confining first order phase transition at ∼ 10 keV temperatures, facilitating production of O(10^9M⊙) primordial SMBHs. Such a phase transition can also naturally lead to the implied mass for a motivated ultralight axion DM candidate, suggesting that SMBHs and ultralight DM may be two sides of the same cosmic coin. We consider constraints and avenues to discovery from super radiance and a modification to Neff. On general grounds, we also expect primordial gravitational waves – from the assumed first order phase transition – characterized by frequencies of O(10^(−12) − 10^(−9) Hz). This frequency regime is largely uncharted, but could be accessible to pulsar timing arrays if the primordial gravitational waves are at the higher end of this frequency range, as could be the case in our assumed confining phase transition. Zoom Virtual Seminar Center for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics (CCAPP) ccapp@osu.edu America/New_York public

Speaker: Julia Gehrlein

Connecting the Extremes: A Story of Supermassive Black Holes and Ultralight Dark Matter

The formation of ultra rare supermassive black holes (SMBHs), with masses of O(10^9M⊙), in the first billion years of the Universe remains an open question in astrophysics. At the same time, ultralight dark matter (DM) with mass in the vicinity of O(10^(−20) eV) has been motivated by small scale DM distributions. Though this type of DM is constrained by various astrophysical considerations, certain observations could be pointing to modest evidence for it. We present a model with a confining first order phase transition at ∼ 10 keV temperatures, facilitating production of O(10^9M⊙) primordial SMBHs. Such a phase transition can also naturally lead to the implied mass for a motivated ultralight axion DM candidate, suggesting that SMBHs and ultralight DM may be two sides of the same cosmic coin. We consider constraints and avenues to discovery from super radiance and a modification to Neff. On general grounds, we also expect primordial gravitational waves – from the assumed first order phase transition – characterized by frequencies of O(10^(−12) − 10^(−9) Hz). This frequency regime is largely uncharted, but could be accessible to pulsar timing arrays if the primordial gravitational waves are at the higher end of this frequency range, as could be the case in our assumed confining phase transition.

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