Dark Matter: Interacting Particles & Gravitational Forces

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Dark matter is primarily thought to interact gravitationally, with weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) being a leading candidate for its constituents. There is debate about whether these particles should participate in weak interactions beyond detection purposes. Cosmological data suggests that dark matter must be "cold," indicating it likely consists of massive particles. Alternative candidates to WIMPs include axions and shadow matter, which also fit the cold dark matter model. The term "WIMP" refers to low interaction rates with normal matter rather than specifically to weak nuclear force interactions.
someGorilla
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I didn't know where to post this. Astrophysics? Particle physics?
I know very little of dark matter. I've read that it's sometimes supposed to interact only gravitationally, and also that weakly interacting particles have been proposed as its constituents. Is there a reason why they should participate in weak interactions, other than the hope to be able to detect them?
 
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There is good reason to believe DM is a WIMP, like a neutrino, but, somewhat less interactive. Neutrinos can pass through light years of lead without a collision.
 
someGorilla said:
I didn't know where to post this. Astrophysics? Particle physics?
I know very little of dark matter. I've read that it's sometimes supposed to interact only gravitationally, and also that weakly interacting particles have been proposed as its constituents. Is there a reason why they should participate in weak interactions, other than the hope to be able to detect them?

The cosmological data just says that dark matter has to be "cold" which means that it's likely to involve massive particles. The "weak" part comes from certain possible particle candidates, but there are cold dark matter candidates that aren't WIMPS, namely axions, shadow matter, and some other candidates.

http://arxiv.org/abs/0803.4196
 
someGorilla said:
I didn't know where to post this. Astrophysics? Particle physics?
I know very little of dark matter. I've read that it's sometimes supposed to interact only gravitationally, and also that weakly interacting particles have been proposed as its constituents. Is there a reason why they should participate in weak interactions, other than the hope to be able to detect them?
The W in WIMP doesn't necessarily mean the weak nuclear force specifically. All it means is that they don't interact much with normal matter or each other. But yes, weak-force interacting dark matter is one common model for dark matter.
 
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
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