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Dark matter/Dark antimatter Asymmetry?

 
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Jul20-12, 11:02 PM   #1
 
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Dark matter/Dark antimatter Asymmetry?


is there evidence to believe that there is an Asymmetry?, for example from the very early universe when there was interaction and annihilation between dark matter and matter
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Jul21-12, 02:08 AM   #2
 
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Your question is too vague. There is no evidence dark matter and baryonic matter ever interacted to any significant degree.
Jul21-12, 06:15 AM   #3
 
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Quote by alemsalem View Post
is there evidence to believe that there is an Asymmetry?, for example from the very early universe when there was interaction and annihilation between dark matter and matter
The general expectation is that there probably isn't any matter/anti-matter asymmetry in dark matter, because dark matter interacts too weakly with itself at lower temperatures to annihilate.
Jul21-12, 09:22 AM   #4
 
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Dark matter/Dark antimatter Asymmetry?


But from what I heard, according to popular models the WIMPs where annihlating into standard model particles and where in thermal equilibrium. until some point when they fell out of equilibrium. is that not true?
Jul21-12, 10:02 AM   #5
 
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Quote by alemsalem View Post
But from what I heard, according to popular models the WIMPs where annihlating into standard model particles and where in thermal equilibrium. until some point when they fell out of equilibrium. is that not true?
It depends a bit on the model, but typically they stop annihilating while there's still a large amount of both matter and anti-matter making up the dark matter.
Jul21-12, 12:54 PM   #6
 
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Quote by Chalnoth View Post
It depends a bit on the model, but typically they stop annihilating while there's still a large amount of both matter and anti-matter making up the dark matter.
So if it had stayed long enough in equilibrium (after the baryon Asymmetry is there), will the Dark matter asymmetry be a prediction?

Thanks!!
Jul21-12, 02:02 PM   #7
 
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Quote by alemsalem View Post
So if it had stayed long enough in equilibrium (after the baryon Asymmetry is there), will the Dark matter asymmetry be a prediction?

Thanks!!
I don't think there's any reason to connect the baryon asymmetry to a hypothetical dark matter asymmetry. But no, I don't think that dark matter can behave the way it does and still annihilate with itself so often.
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