Properties of Dark Matter Revealed by Astrometric Measurements of the Milky Way and Local Galaxies
Edward Shaya, Robert Olling, Massimo Ricotti, Stuart Vogel, Steven R., Majewski, Richard J. Patterson, Ron Allen, Roeland P. van der Marel, Warren, Brown, James Bullock, Andreas Burkert, Francoise Combes, Oleg Gnedin, Carl, Grillmair, Shri Kulkarni, Puragra Guhathakurta

TL;DR
This paper discusses how precise astrometric measurements of the Milky Way and local galaxies can reveal fundamental properties of dark matter, including its distribution, mass, and stability, thereby advancing our understanding of its nature.
Contribution
It proposes using detailed astrometric data to determine dark matter properties such as mass, distribution, and stability in the nearby universe, extending standard particle physics models.
Findings
Dark matter dominates the mass in the outer Milky Way and Local Group.
Precise 3-D stellar velocities can reveal dark matter halo shape and density.
Measurements can help determine the total mass of the Galaxy.
Abstract
The fact that dark matter (DM), thus far, has revealed itself only on scales of galaxies and larger, again thrusts onto astrophysics the opportunity and the responsibility to confront the age old mystery "What is the nature of matter?" By deriving basic data on the nature of DM - e.g., mass of its particle(s), present mean temperature, distribution in galaxies and other structures in the universe, and capacity for dissipational collapse - we will be uncovering the properties of the dominant species of matter in the universe and significantly extending the standard models of particle physics. Determining the mass of the DM particle to an order of magnitude would help to sort out the particle family to which it (or they) belongs. Beyond mass, there are issues of stability. The DM particle may be unstable with a measurable half-life, or it may become unstable after absorbing a certain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
