Gravitational Waves as a Probe of particle Dark Matter
APA
(2025). Gravitational Waves as a Probe of particle Dark Matter. SciVideos. https://youtu.be/X9Yv6StYqtM
MLA
Gravitational Waves as a Probe of particle Dark Matter. SciVideos, Jan. 01, 2025, https://youtu.be/X9Yv6StYqtM
BibTex
@misc{ scivideos_ICTS:30665, doi = {}, url = {https://youtu.be/X9Yv6StYqtM}, author = {}, keywords = {}, language = {en}, title = {Gravitational Waves as a Probe of particle Dark Matter}, publisher = {}, year = {2025}, month = {jan}, note = {ICTS:30665 see, \url{https://scivideos.org/index.php/icts-tifr/30665}} }
Abstract
Galactic Dark Matter (DM) particles can get captured inside celestial bodies if they have some non-zero but weak interaction with the nucleons. Due to their significant size and lifetime, these celestial bodies can capture huge amounts of DM particles, and eventually, an overly dense dark core is created. This core can further collapse and form a minuscule Balck Hole (BH) that can eat up the entire celestial body over time and form a similar mass BH. Depending on the DM- nucleon interaction cross-section, this theory can be studied in non-compact stars like the Sun, and Jupiter, and compact objects like Neutron stars (NS). We show constraints on DM parameter space using gravitational wave detectors like LIGO (ground-based) and LISA (space-based), by studying low-mass (1-2.5 M_{solar}) compact object mergers and close stellar binaries in their inspiral phase respectively. We will argue how these gravitational wave experiments can work as a direct detection experiment for DM searches.