Cosmological Simulations with Self-Interacting Dark Matter I: Constant Density Cores and Substructure
Miguel Rocha (1), Annika H.G. Peter (1), James S. Bullock (1), Manoj, Kaplinghat (1), Shea Garrison-Kimmel (1), Jose Onorbe (1), Leonidas A., Moustakas (2) ((1) Center for Cosmology, Department of Physics, Astronomy,, University of California, Irvine, CA

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to examine how self-interacting dark matter affects halo density profiles and substructure, finding that certain SIDM models produce cores consistent with observations while others do not.
Contribution
Introduces a new SIDM N-body algorithm and provides scaling relations for halo cores, demonstrating the potential of SIDM with specific cross sections to match observational data.
Findings
SIDM creates constant-density cores with lower central densities than CDM.
Subhalo counts are only modestly reduced in SIDM compared to CDM.
SIDM with .1 cm^2/g can reproduce observed core sizes and densities.
Abstract
We use cosmological simulations to study the effects of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the density profiles and substructure counts of dark matter halos from the scales of spiral galaxies to galaxy clusters, focusing explicitly on models with cross sections over dark matter particle mass \sigma/m = 1 and 0.1 cm^2/g. Our simulations rely on a new SIDM N-body algorithm that is derived self-consistently from the Boltzmann equation and that reproduces analytic expectations in controlled numerical experiments. We find that well-resolved SIDM halos have constant-density cores, with significantly lower central densities than their CDM counterparts. In contrast, the subhalo content of SIDM halos is only modestly reduced compared to CDM, with the suppression greatest for large hosts and small halo-centric distances. Moreover, the large-scale clustering and halo circular velocity…
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