Collisional Dark Matter and the Structure of Dark Halos

  • Yoshida N
  • Springel V
  • White S
  • et al.
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Abstract

We study how the internal structure of dark halos is affected if cold dark matter particles are assumed to have a large cross section for elastic collisions. We identify a cluster halo in a large cosmological N-body simulation and resimulate its formation with progressively increasing resolution. We compare the structure found in the two cases in which dark matter is treated as collisionless or as a fluid. For the collisionless case, the overall ellipticity of the cluster, the central density cusp, and the amount of surviving substructure are all similar to those found in earlier high-resolution simulations. Collisional dark matter results in a cluster that is more nearly spherical at all radii, has a steeper central density cusp, and has less - but still substantial - surviving substructure. As in the collisionless case, these results for a "fluid" cluster halo are expected to carry over approximately to smaller mass systems. The observed rotation curves of dwarf galaxies then argue that self-interacting dark matter can only be viable if intermediate cross sections produce structure that does not lie between the extremes we have simulated.

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APA

Yoshida, N., Springel, V., White, S. D. M., & Tormen, G. (2000). Collisional Dark Matter and the Structure of Dark Halos. The Astrophysical Journal, 535(2), L103–L106. https://doi.org/10.1086/312707

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