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

TL;DR
This paper analyzes phase transitions in a fermionic King model for dark matter halos, revealing stable and metastable states, critical points, and implications for the structure of large and dwarf halos, including the presence of black holes.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed study of phase transitions in the fermionic King model, highlighting the role of quantum effects and ensemble inequivalence in dark matter halo structures.
Findings
Identification of phase transitions between gaseous and condensed phases.
Existence of critical points and negative specific heat regions.
Large halos likely contain black holes rather than fermion balls.
Abstract
We discuss the nature of phase transitions in the fermionic King model which describes tidally truncated quantum self-gravitating systems. This distribution function takes into account the escape of high energy particles and has a finite mass. On the other hand, the Pauli exclusion principle puts an upper bound on the phase space density of the system and stabilizes it against gravitational collapse. As a result, there exists a statistical equilibrium state for any accessible values of energy and temperature. We plot the caloric curves and investigate the nature of phase transitions as a function of the degeneracy parameter in both microcanonical and canonical ensembles. We consider stable and metastable states and emphasize the importance of the latter for systems with long-range interactions. Phase transitions can take place between a "gaseous" phase unaffected by quantum mechanics…
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