We use cosmological simulations to study the effects of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the density profiles and substructure counts of dark matter halos from the scales of spiral galaxies to galaxy clusters, focusing explicitly on models with cross sections over dark matter particle mass σ/m = 1 and 0.1 cm 2 /g. Our simulations rely on a new SIDM N-body algorithm that is derived self-consistently from the Boltzmann equation and that reproduces analytic expectations in controlled numerical experiments. We find that well-resolved SIDM halos have constant-density cores, with significantly lower central densities than their CDM counterparts. In contrast, the subhalo content of SIDM halos is only modestly reduced compared to CDM, with the suppression greatest for large hosts and small halo-centric distances. Moreover, the large-scale clustering and halo circular velocity functions in SIDM are effectively identical to CDM, meaning that all of the large-scale successes of CDM are equally well matched by SIDM. From our largest cross section runs we are able to extract scaling relations for core sizes and central densities over a range of halo sizes and find a strong correlation between the core radius of an SIDM halo and the NFW scale radius of its CDM counterpart. We construct a simple analytic model, based on CDM scaling relations, that captures all aspects of the scaling relations for SIDM halos. Our results show that halo core densities in σ/m = 1 cm 2 /g models are too low to match observations of galaxy clusters, low surface brightness spirals (LSBs), and dwarf spheroidal galaxies. However, SIDM with σ/m ≃ 0.1 cm 2 /g appears capable of reproducing reported core sizes and central densities of dwarfs, LSBs, and galaxy clusters without the need for velocity dependence. Higher resolution simulations over a wider range of masses will be required to confirm this expectation. We discuss constraints arising from the Bullet cluster observations, measurements of dark matter density on small-scales and subhalo survival requirements, and show that SIDM models with σ/m ≃ 0.1 cm 2 /g ≃ 0.2 barn/GeV are consistent with all observational constraints.
If dark matter has a large self-interaction scattering cross section, then interactions among dark-matter particles will drive galaxy and cluster halos to become spherical in their centers. Work in the past has used this effect to rule out velocity-independent, elastic cross sections larger than σ/m 0.02 cm 2 /g based on comparisons to the shapes of galaxy cluster lensing potentials and X-ray isophotes. In this paper, we use cosmological simulations to show that these constraints were off by more than an order of magnitude because (a) they did not properly account for the fact that the observed ellipticity gets contributions from the triaxial mass distribution outside the core set by scatterings, (b) the scatter in axis ratios is large and (c) the core region retains more of its triaxial nature than estimated before. Including these effects properly shows that the same observations now allow dark matter self-interaction cross sections at least as large as σ/m = 0.1 cm 2 /g. We show that constraints on self-interacting dark matter from strong-lensing clusters are likely to improve significantly in the near future, but possibly more via central densities and core sizes than halo shapes.
The cold dark matter (CDM) cosmological model has been remarkably successful in explaining cosmic structure over an enormous span of redshift, but it has faced persistent challenges from observations that probe the innermost regions of dark matter halos and the properties of the Milky Way's dwarf galaxy satellites. We review the current observational and theoretical status of these "small-scale controversies." Cosmological simulations that incorporate only gravity and collisionless CDM predict halos with abundant substructure and central densities that are too high to match constraints from galaxy dynamics. The solution could lie in baryonic physics: Recent numerical simulations and analytical models suggest that gravitational potential fluctuations tied to efficient supernova feedback can flatten the central cusps of halos in massive galaxies, and a combination of feedback and low star formation efficiency could explain why most of the dark matter subhalos orbiting the Milky Way do not host visible galaxies. However, it is not clear that this solution can work in the lowest mass galaxies, where discrepancies are observed. Alternatively, the small-scale conflicts could be evidence of more complex physics in the dark sector itself. For example, elastic scattering from strong dark matter self-interactions can alter predicted halo mass profiles, leading to good agreement with observations across a wide range of galaxy mass. Gravitational lensing and dynamical perturbations of tidal streams in the stellar halo provide evidence for an abundant population of low-mass subhalos in accord with CDM predictions. These observational approaches will get more powerful over the next few years.dark matter | cosmology | galaxy formation T he cold dark matter (CDM) hypothesis-that dark matter consists of a weakly interacting particle whose velocity dispersion in the early universe was too small to erase structure on a galactic or subgalactic scale-emerged in the early 1980s and quickly became a central element of the theory of cosmic structure formation. Influential early papers include Peebles' calculation of cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies and the matter power spectrum (1), discussions of galaxy formation with particle dark matter by Bond et al. (2) and Blumenthal et al. (3,4), and Davis et al.'s (5) numerical simulations of galaxy clustering. By the mid-1990s, the simplest CDM model with scale-invariant primordial fluctuations and a critical matter density of ðΩ m = 1Þ had run afoul of multiple lines of observational evidence, including the shape of the galaxy power spectrum, estimates of the mean matter density from galaxy clusters and galaxy motions, the age of the universe inferred from estimates of the Hubble constant, and the amplitude of matter clustering extrapolated forward from the fluctuations measured in the CMB. Many variants on "canonical" CDM were proposed to address these challenges, and by the turn of the century, the combination of supernova evidence for cosmic acceleration and CMB evidence for ...
We investigate the effect of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the density profiles of V max 40 km s −1 isolated dwarf dark matter halos -the scale of relevance for the too big to fail problem (TBTF) -using very high-resolution cosmological zoom simulations. Each halo has millions of particles within its virial radius. We find that SIDM models with cross sections per unit mass spanning the range σ/m = 0.5 − 50 cm 2 g −1 alleviate TBTF and produce constant density cores of size 300 − 1000 pc, comparable to the half-light radii of M ∼ 10 5−7 M dwarfs. The largest, lowest density cores develop for cross sections in the middle of this range, σ/m ∼ 5 − 10 cm 2 g −1 . Our largest SIDM cross section run (σ/m = 50 cm 2 g −1 ) develops a slightly denser core owing to mild core-collapse behavior, but it remains less dense than the CDM case and retains a constant density core profile. Our work suggests that SIDM cross sections as large or larger than 50 cm 2 g −1 remain viable on velocity scales of dwarf galaxies (v rms ∼ 40 km s −1 ). The range of SIDM cross sections that alleviate TBTF and the cusp/core problem spans at least two orders of magnitude and therefore need not be particularly fine-tuned.
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