Properties of Galactic Dark Matter: Constraints from Astronomical Observations
Benjamin Burch, Ramanath Cowsik

TL;DR
This paper models the distribution of dark matter in the Galaxy by combining astronomical observations with theoretical models, deriving key parameters like density and velocity, and discussing observational constraints.
Contribution
It introduces self-consistent models of dark matter distribution based on a lowered-isothermal phase-space assumption and compares them with observational data.
Findings
Best local dark matter density: 0.56-0.72 GeV/cm³
Dark matter density at Galactic center: 100-250 GeV/cm³
Dark matter particle speed: 490-550 km/s
Abstract
The distributions of normal matter and of dark matter in the Galaxy are coupled to each other as they both move in the common gravitational potential. In order to fully exploit this interplay and to derive the various properties of dark matter relevant to their direct and indirect detection, we have comprehensively reviewed the astronomical observations of the spatial and velocity distributions of the components of normal matter. We then postulate that the phase-space distribution of dark matter follows a lowered-isothermal form and self-consistently solve Poisson's equation to construct several models for the spatial and velocity distributions of dark matter. In this paper, we compute the total gravitational potential of the normal and dark matter components and investigate their consistency with current observations of the rotation curve of the Galaxy and of the spatial and velocity…
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