Consequences of dark matter self-annihilation for galaxy formation
Priyamvada Natarajan (Yale), Darren Croton (Berkeley), Gianfranco, Bertone (IAP)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how dark matter self-annihilation could serve as an additional heating mechanism in galaxy formation, potentially explaining observed galaxy luminosity functions beyond traditional feedback processes.
Contribution
It introduces dark matter self-annihilation into galaxy formation models and identifies specific conditions under which it can significantly influence galaxy evolution.
Findings
Self-annihilation can match observed luminosity functions under extreme parameter values.
Steepening dark matter density profiles enhances annihilation heating effects.
WIMP annihilation could be an inevitable and significant feedback process in galaxy formation.
Abstract
Galaxy formation requires a process that continually heats gas and quenches star formation in order to reproduce the observed shape of the luminosity function of bright galaxies. To accomplish this, current models invoke heating from supernovae, and energy injection from active galactic nuclei. However, observations of radio-loud active galactic nuclei suggest that their feedback is likely to not be as efficient as required, signaling the need for additional heating processes. We propose the self-annihilation of weakly interacting massive particles that constitute dark matter as a steady source of heating. In this paper, we explore the circumstances under which this process may provide the required energy input. To do so, dark matter annihilations are incorporated into a galaxy formation model within the Millennium cosmological simulation. Energy input from self-annihilation can…
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