The impact of baryons on the direct detection of dark matter
Chris Kelso, Christopher Savage, Monica Valluri, Katherine Freese,, Gregory S. Stinson, Jeremy Bailin

TL;DR
This study compares the Standard Halo Model to cosmological simulations including baryons to assess its accuracy in representing dark matter distribution for direct detection experiments, finding it generally reliable.
Contribution
It demonstrates that baryonic physics makes the SHM a better fit to simulated Milky Way-like halos, supporting its use in direct detection analyses.
Findings
Baryons make dark matter halos more spherical.
Velocity distribution becomes less anisotropic with baryons.
No significant dark disk component found in simulations.
Abstract
The spatial and velocity distributions of dark matter particles in the Milky Way Halo affect the signals expected to be observed in searches for dark matter. Results from direct detection experiments are often analyzed assuming a simple isothermal distribution of dark matter, the Standard Halo Model (SHM). Yet there has been skepticism regarding the validity of this simple model due to the complicated gravitational collapse and merger history of actual galaxies. In this paper we compare the SHM to the results of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation to investigate whether or not the SHM is a good representation of the true WIMP distribution in the analysis of direct detection data. We examine two Milky Way-like galaxies from the MaGICC cosmological simulations (a) with dark matter only and (b) with baryonic physics included. The inclusion of baryons drives the…
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