Dark Matter Annihilation and Primordial Star Formation
Aravind Natarajan (1), Jonathan C. Tan (2), Brian W. O'Shea (3) ((1), Dept. of Physics, Uni. Bielefeld; (2) Dept. of Astronomy, University of, Florida; (3) Dept. of Physics, Astronomy, Michigan State University)

TL;DR
This study explores how dark matter annihilation influences the formation of the first stars, finding that under certain conditions it can significantly heat the gas, potentially altering star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of dark matter density profiles and their impact on primordial star formation, incorporating cosmological simulations and adiabatic contraction effects.
Findings
Dark matter heating is generally much smaller than cooling at lower densities.
Increased dark matter density steepness can lead to heating dominating cooling at high densities.
Dark matter annihilation luminosity remains relatively constant around 10^3 L_sun.
Abstract
We investigate the effects of weakly-interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark matter annihilation on the formation of Population III.1 stars, which are theorized to form from the collapse of gas cores at the centers of dark matter minihalos. We consider the relative importance of cooling due to baryonic radiative processes and heating due to WIMP annihilation. We analyze the dark matter and gas profiles of several halos formed in cosmological-scale numerical simulations. The heating rate depends sensitively on the dark matter density profile, which we approximate with a power law rho_chi ~ r^{-alpha_chi}, in the numerically unresolved inner regions of the halo. If we assume a self-similar structure so that alpha_chi ~= 1.5 as measured on the resolved scales ~1pc, then for a fiducial WIMP mass of 100GeV, the heating rate is typically much smaller (<10^{-3}) than the cooling rate for…
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