http://arxiv.org/abs/2104.07043
Scalar Field Dark Matter (SFDM) comprised of ultralight bosons has attracted great interest as an alternative to standard, collisionless Cold Dark Matter (CDM) because of its novel structure-formation dynamics, described by the coupled Schrödinger-Poisson equations. In the free-field (“fuzzy”) limit of SFDM (FDM), structure is inhibited below the de Broglie wavelength, but resembles CDM on larger scales. Virialized haloes have “solitonic” cores of radius $\sim\lambda_\text{deB}$, surrounded by CDM-like envelopes. When a strong enough repulsive self-interaction (SI) is also present, structure can be inhibited below a second length scale, $\lambda_\text{SI}$, with $\lambda_\text{SI}> \lambda_\text{deB}$ — called the Thomas-Fermi (TF) regime. FDM dynamics differs from CDM because of quantum pressure, and SFDM-TF differs further by adding SI pressure. In the small-$\lambda_\text{deB}$ limit, however, we can model all three by fluid conservation equations for a compressible, $\gamma=5/3$ ideal gas, with ideal gas pressure sourced by internal velocity dispersion and, for the TF regime, an added SI pressure, $P_\text{SI}\propto \rho^2$. We use these fluid equations to simulate halo formation from gravitational collapse in 1D, spherical symmetry, demonstrating for the first time that SFDM-TF haloes form with cores the size of $R_\text{TF}$, the radius of an SI-pressure-supported $(n=1)$-polytrope, surrounded by CDM-like envelopes. In comparison with rotation curves of dwarf galaxies in the local Universe, SFDM-TF haloes pass the [“too-big-to-fail” + “core-cusp”]-test if $R_\text{TF}\gtrsim 1$ kpc.
T. Dawoodbhoy, P. Shapiro and T. Rindler-Daller
Fri, 16 Apr 2021
15/58
Comments: 27 pages, 11 figures, submitted to MNRAS, comments welcome
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