Theory of Dark Matter Superfluidity
Lasha Berezhiani, Justin Khoury

TL;DR
This paper introduces a unified dark matter superfluidity model that aligns with cosmological observations and galactic dynamics, predicting unique astrophysical phenomena and linking to cold atom superfluid physics.
Contribution
It presents a novel superfluid dark matter theory that reproduces both LambdaCDM and MOND phenomenology, with a common origin for dark matter and modified gravity effects.
Findings
Superfluid core within galaxies with polytropic equation of state
Distinct observational signatures like vortices and merger patterns
Superfluid phonon theory similar to unitary Fermi gas
Abstract
We propose a novel theory of dark matter (DM) superfluidity that matches the successes of the LambdaCDM model on cosmological scales while simultaneously reproducing the MOdified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) phenomenology on galactic scales. The DM and MOND components have a common origin, representing different phases of a single underlying substance. DM consists of axion-like particles with mass of order eV and strong self-interactions. The condensate has a polytropic equation of state P~rho^3 giving rise to a superfluid core within galaxies. Instead of behaving as individual collisionless particles, the DM superfluid is more aptly described as collective excitations. Superfluid phonons, in particular, are assumed to be governed by a MOND-like effective action and mediate a MONDian acceleration between baryonic matter particles. Our framework naturally distinguishes between galaxies…
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