Cosmological Simulations of Decaying Dark Matter: Implications for Small-scale Structure of Dark Matter Halos
Mei-Yu Wang, Annika H. G. Peter, Louis E. Strigari, Andrew R. Zentner,, Bryan Arant, Shea Garrison-Kimmel, and Miguel Rocha

TL;DR
This paper uses N-body simulations to study how decaying dark matter affects small-scale structures like dwarf galaxies, potentially solving issues like the missing satellites and too big to fail problems.
Contribution
It introduces detailed simulations of decaying dark matter models with lifetimes near the Hubble time, showing their impact on galaxy substructure and addressing small-scale structure problems.
Findings
Decaying dark matter reduces the number and density of Galactic subhalos.
Models with recoil speeds of 20-40 km/s align with observed dwarf galaxy properties.
Decaying dark matter predicts halo evolution over cosmic time, consistent with early universe structure formation.
Abstract
We present a set of N-body simulations of a class of models in which an unstable dark matter particle decays into a stable non-interacting dark matter particle, with decay lifetime comparable to the Hubble time. We study the effects of the kinematic recoil velocity received by the stable dark matter on the structures of dark matter halos ranging from galaxy-cluster to Milky Way mass scales. For Milky Way-mass halos, we use high-resolution, zoom-in simulations to explore the effects of decays on Galactic substructure. In general, halos with circular velocities comparable to the magnitude of kick velocity are most strongly affected by decays. We show that decaying dark matter models with lifetimes comparable to Hubble time and recoil speeds about 20-40 km/s can significantly reduce both the abundance of Galactic subhalos and the internal densities of the subhalos. We also compare subhalo…
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