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Authors: Cosmin Ilie and Caleb Levy
One approach to understanding Dark Matter (DM) involves studying how it interacts with compact astrophysical objects. Through interactions with an object’s constituents, DM in the region around an object can become gravitationally bound inside the object (capture) and, if DM undergoes annihilation processes, can leave an observable imprint on the object. Additionally, captured DM can escape the object through up-scattering with the object’s nuclei distributions, a process known as evaporation. In Ilie et al. 2020, analytic expressions for the capture rate of DM are computed assuming the object's escape velocity (
Exoplanets are promising candidates for probing DM through these processes, particularly in the sub-GeV regime, as described in Leane and Smirnov 2021 who compute their sensitivity to DM at masses where evaporation is negligible. In this work, we improve on their results by including completely the effects of evaporation in addition to capture and annihilation. We compute our evaporation rate as per Garani and Palomares-Ruiz 2022, which includes the suppression from the so-called "ping-pong" effect whereby DM particles on outbound trajectories with speed