Models of dark matter halos based on statistical mechanics: I. The classical King model
Pierre-Henri Chavanis, Mohammed Lemou, Florian M\'ehats

TL;DR
This paper explores the classical King model as a description for large dark matter halos, analyzing their stability, density profiles, and comparison with observations, especially near the point of marginal stability.
Contribution
It applies the classical King model to dark matter halos, providing a detailed stability analysis and linking theoretical profiles to observational data.
Findings
Large dark matter halos are well-described by the King model near marginal stability.
The density profile at this point resembles the modified Hubble profile with a flat core.
Halos less steep than this are unstable.
Abstract
We consider the possibility that dark matter halos are described by the Fermi-Dirac distribution at finite temperature. This is the case if dark matter is a self-gravitating quantum gas made of massive neutrinos at statistical equilibrium. This is also the case if dark matter can be treated as a self-gravitating collisionless gas experiencing Lynden-Bell's type of violent relaxation. In order to avoid the infinite mass problem and carry out a rigorous stability analysis, we consider the fermionic King model. In this paper, we study the non-degenerate limit leading to the classical King model. This model was initially introduced to describe globular clusters. We propose to apply it also to large dark matter halos where quantum effects are negligible. We determine the caloric curve and study the thermodynamical stability of the different configurations. Equilibrium states exist only above…
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