The impact of ultra-light axion self-interactions on the large scale structure of the Universe
Vincent Desjacques, Alex Kehagias, Antonio Riotto

TL;DR
This paper investigates how tiny attractive self-interactions among ultra-light axions influence cosmic structure stability, revealing potential observable effects in the Lyman-alpha forest and implications for dark matter models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that even minimal axion self-interactions significantly affect the stability of cosmic structures, a factor often neglected in previous studies.
Findings
Pancakes are stable against certain perturbations.
Filaments become unstable if mass per unit length exceeds a critical value.
Axion solitonic cores may produce detectable signals in the Lyman-alpha forest.
Abstract
Ultra-light axions have sparked attention because their tiny mass eV, which leads to a Kiloparsec-scale de Broglie wavelength comparable to the size of dwarf galaxy, could alleviate the so-called small-scale crisis of massive cold dark matter (CDM) candidates.However, recent analyses of the Lyman- forest power spectrum set a tight lower bound on their mass of eV which makes them much less relevant from an astrophysical point of view. An important caveat to these numerical studies is that they do not take into account attractive self-interactions among ultra-light axions, which can counteract the quantum "pressure" induced by the strong delocalization of the particles. In this work, we show that even a tiny attractive interaction among ultra-light axions can have a significant impact on the stability of cosmic structures at low redshift. After…
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