Strong lensing by fermionic dark matter in galaxies
L. Gabriel G\'omez, C. R. Arg\"uelles, Volker Perlick, J. A. Rueda and, R. Ruffini

TL;DR
This paper explores the gravitational lensing effects of a fermionic dark matter model with quantum cores in galaxies, comparing it to other models and analyzing potential observational signatures.
Contribution
It introduces the lensing properties of a fermionic dark matter model with quantum cores, providing predictions for lensing effects at various galactic scales and regimes.
Findings
Quantum cores do not produce photon spheres or shadows.
Lensing effects differ significantly near the galactic center compared to black holes.
Outer region lensing can help distinguish dark matter models.
Abstract
It has been shown that a self-gravitating system of massive keV fermions in thermodynamic equilibrium correctly describes the dark matter (DM) distribution in galactic halos and predicts a denser quantum core towards the center of the configuration. Such a quantum core, for a fermion mass in the range of keV keV, can be an alternative interpretation of the central compact object in Sgr A*. We present in this work the gravitational lensing properties of this novel DM model in Milky Way-like spiral galaxies. We describe the lensing effects of the pure DM component both on halo scales, where we compare them to the effects of the Navarro-Frenk-White and the Non-Singular Isothermal Sphere DM models, and near the galaxy center, where we compare them with the effects of a Schwarzschild BH. For the particle mass leading to the most compact DM core, $m…
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