Enhanced tidal stripping of satellites in the galactic halo from dark matter self-interactions
Gregory A. Dooley, Annika H.G. Peter, Mark Vogelsberger, Jes\'us, Zavala, Anna Frebel

TL;DR
This study shows that self-interacting dark matter causes satellites to lose stars more rapidly than in cold dark matter models, especially in low-mass satellites, affecting their size and stellar distribution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of how SIDM influences tidal stripping and stellar dispersal in satellite galaxies compared to CDM.
Findings
Stars are stripped faster in SIDM than in CDM.
SIDM leads to larger half-light radii and more dispersed stars in satellites.
Velocity-dependent SIDM models show stronger effects in lower-mass satellites.
Abstract
We investigate the effects of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the tidal stripping and evaporation of satellite galaxies in a Milky Way-like host. We use a suite of five zoom-in, dark-matter-only simulations, two with velocity-independent SIDM cross sections, two with velocity-dependent SIDM cross sections, and one cold dark matter simulation for comparison. After carefully assigning stellar mass to satellites at infall, we find that stars are stripped at a higher rate in SIDM than in CDM. In contrast, the total bound dark matter mass loss rate is minimally affected, with subhalo evaporation having negligible effects on satellites for viable SIDM models. Centrally located stars in SIDM haloes disperse out to larger radii as cores grow. Consequently, the half-light radius of satellites increases, stars become more vulnerable to tidal stripping, and the stellar mass function is…
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