What does the Bullet Cluster tell us about self-interacting dark matter?
Andrew Robertson, Richard Massey, Vincent Eke

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations of the Bullet Cluster to assess how observational methods impact constraints on dark matter self-interactions, revealing that previous tight limits may be overstated due to measurement biases.
Contribution
It introduces the first simulations including both self-interacting dark matter and gas, highlighting the importance of observationally-motivated analysis methods for accurate constraints.
Findings
Measurement techniques significantly affect dark matter offset estimates.
Gas stripping causes asymmetries influencing position measurements.
Previous constraints may overstate dark matter self-interaction limits.
Abstract
We perform numerical simulations of the merging galaxy cluster 1E 0657-56 (the Bullet Cluster), including the effects of elastic dark matter scattering. In a similar manner to the stripping of gas by ram pressure, dark matter self-interactions would transfer momentum between the two galaxy cluster dark matter haloes, causing them to lag behind the collisionless galaxies. The absence of an observed separation between the dark matter and stellar components in the Bullet Cluster has been used to place upper limits on the cross-section for dark matter scattering. We emphasise the importance of analysing simulations in an observationally-motivated manner, finding that the way in which the positions of the various components are measured can have a larger impact on derived constraints on dark matter's self-interaction cross-section than reasonable changes to the initial conditions for the…
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