DOI: 10.1103/physrevd.109.095008 ISSN: 2470-0010
Dark dimension, the swampland, and the dark matter fraction composed of primordial near-extremal black holes
Luis A. Anchordoqui, Ignatios Antoniadis, Dieter Lüst In a recent publication we studied the decay rate of primordial black holes perceiving the dark dimension, an innovative five-dimensional (5D) scenario that has a compact space with characteristic length scale in the micron range. We demonstrated that the rate of Hawking radiation of 5D black holes slows down compared to 4D black holes of the same mass. Armed with our findings we showed that for a species scale of O(1010 GeV), an all-dark-matter interpretation in terms of primordial black holes should be feasible for black hole masses in the range 1014≲M/g≲1021. As a natural outgrowth of our recent study, herein we calculate the Hawking evaporation of near-extremal 5D black holes. Using generic entropy arguments we demonstrate that Hawking evaporation of higher-dimensional near-extremal black holes proceeds at a slower rate than the corresponding Schwarzschild black holes of the same mass. Assisted by this result we show that if there were 5D primordial near-extremal black holes in nature, then a primordial black hole all-dark-matter interpretation would be possible in the mass range 105β≲M/g≲1021, where β is a parameter that controls the difference between mass and charge of the associated near-extremal black hole.
Published by the American Physical Society
2024