Spreading out and staying sharp - Creating diverse rotation curves via baryonic and self-interaction effects
Peter Creasey, Omid Sameie, Laura V. Sales, Hai-Bo Yu, Mark, Vogelsberger, Jes\'us Zavala

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to compare the effects of baryons and self-interacting dark matter on galaxy rotation curves, showing SIDM can better reproduce the observed diversity and outliers in rotation profiles.
Contribution
It demonstrates that SIDM models with baryonic effects can produce a wider variety of rotation curves, including outliers, aligning more closely with observations than CDM models.
Findings
SIDM creates more cored, diverse rotation curves.
Baryonic distributions significantly influence rotation curve shapes.
SIDM better reproduces observed outliers in galaxy rotation profiles.
Abstract
Galactic rotation curves are a fundamental constraint for any cosmological model. We use controlled N-body simulations of galaxies to study the gravitational effect of baryons in a scenario with collisionless cold dark matter (CDM) versus one with a self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) component. In particular, we examine the inner profiles of the rotation curves in the velocity range Vmax = 30-250 km/s, whose diversity has been found to be greater than predicted by the Lambda-CDM scenario. We find that the scatter in the observed rotation curves exceeds that predicted by dark matter only mass-concentration relations in either the CDM nor SIDM models. Allowing for realistic baryonic content and spatial distributions, however, helps create a large variety of rotation curve shapes; which is in better agreement with observations in the case of self-interactions due to the characteristic…
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