The recent detection of a 3.5 keV X-ray line from the centres of galaxies and clusters by Bulbul et al. and Boyarsky et al. has been interpreted as emission from the decay of 7 keV sterile neutrinos which could make up the (warm) dark matter (WDM). As part of the Copernicus Complexio (COCO) programme, we investigate the properties of dark matter haloes formed in a high-resolution cosmological N-body simulation from initial conditions similar to those expected in a universe in which the dark matter consists of 7 keV sterile neutrinos. This simulation and its cold dark matter (CDM) counterpart have ~13.4 bn particles, each of mass ~105 h-1M⊙, providing detailed information about halo structure and evolution down to dwarf galaxy mass scales. Non-linear structure formation on small scales (M200 ≲2 × 109 h-1M⊙) begins slightly later in COCO-WARM than in COCO-COLD. The halo mass function at the present day in theWDM model begins to drop below its CDM counterpart at a mass ~2 × 109 h-1M⊙ and declines very rapidly towards lower masses so that there are five times fewer haloes of mass M200 = 108 h-1M⊙ in COCO-WARM than in COCO-COLD. Halo concentrations on dwarf galaxy scales are correspondingly smaller in COCO-WARM, and we provide a simple functional form that describes its evolution with redshift. The shapes of haloes are similar in the two cases, but the smallest haloes in COCO-WARM rotate slightly more slowly than their CDM counterparts.
CITATION STYLE
Bose, S., Hellwing, W. A., Frenk, C. S., Jenkins, A., Lovell, M. R., Helly, J. C., & Li, B. (2016). The Copernicus Complexio: Statistical properties of warm dark matter haloes. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 455(1), 318–333. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2294
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