Constraints on interacting dark energy models from galaxy Rotation Curves
Marco Baldi, Paolo Salucci

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to test how interacting Dark Energy models affect galaxy rotation curves, finding some models incompatible with observations and thus constraining Dark Energy theories.
Contribution
It demonstrates that certain interacting Dark Energy models with steeply increasing coupling functions can be ruled out based on galaxy rotation curve data.
Findings
Steep coupling growth models predict higher halo concentrations.
Some interacting Dark Energy models cannot reproduce observed galaxy rotation curves.
Dynamical galaxy properties can constrain Dark Energy interactions.
Abstract
[Abridged] High-resolution N-body simulations have recently shown that the structural properties of highly nonlinear cosmic structures, as e.g. their average concentration at a given mass, could be significantly modified in the presence of an interaction between Dark Energy and Dark Matter. While a constant interaction strength leads to less concentrated density profiles, a steep growth in time of the coupling function has been shown to determine a large increase of halo concentrations over a wide range of masses, including the typical halos hosting luminous spiral galaxies. This determines a substantial worsening of the "cusp-core" tension arising in the standard CDM model and provides a direct way to constrain the form of the Dark Energy interaction. In the present paper we make use of the outcomes of some high-resolution N-body simulations of a specific class of interacting…
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