Angular Momentum and Vortex Formation in Bose-Einstein-Condensed Cold Dark Matter Haloes
Tanja Rindler-Daller, Paul R. Shapiro

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether angular momentum in Bose-Einstein-condensed dark matter haloes can lead to vortex formation, potentially affecting their structure and observable properties, within the context of alternative dark matter models.
Contribution
It analyzes the conditions under which vortices form in rotating BEC dark matter haloes, considering angular momentum, particle mass, and self-interaction strength, a largely unexplored aspect.
Findings
Vortices form if self-interaction is sufficiently strong.
Angular momentum can induce vortex formation in BEC haloes.
Vortex formation depends on particle mass and self-interaction parameters.
Abstract
(Abridged) Extensions of the standard model of particle physics predict very light bosons, ranging from about 10^{-5} eV for the QCD axion to 10^{-33} eV for ultra-light particles, which could be the cold dark matter (CDM) in the Universe. If so, their phase-space density must be high enough to form a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). The fluid-like nature of BEC-CDM dynamics differs from that of standard collisionless CDM (sCDM), so observations of galactic haloes may distinguish them. sCDM has problems with galaxy observations on small scales, which BEC-CDM may overcome for a large range of particle mass m and self-interaction strength g. For quantum-coherence on galactic scales of radius R and mass M, either the de-Broglie wavelength lambda_deB <~ R, requiring m >~ m_H \cong 10^{-25}(R/100 kpc)^{-1/2}(M/10^{12} M_solar)^{-1/2} eV, or else lambda_deB << R but self-interaction balances…
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