Dark matter halos in the multicomponent model. II. Density profiles of galactic halos
Keita Todoroki, Mikhail V. Medvedev

TL;DR
This study investigates how a two-component self-interacting dark matter model affects galactic halo density profiles, showing it can resolve core-cusp and related small-scale structure problems in cosmology.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulation results demonstrating the impact of velocity-dependent self-interactions in a two-component dark matter model on galactic halo properties.
Findings
Self-interactions suppress central cusps in halos.
Core radii depend on cross-section magnitude and velocity dependence.
Results align with solutions to small-scale structure problems.
Abstract
The multicomponent dark matter model with self-scattering and inter-conversions of species into one another is an alternative dark matter paradigm that is capable of resolving the long-standing problems of CDM cosmology at small scales. In this paper, we have studied in detail the properties of dark matter halos with obtained in -body cosmological simulations with the simplest two-component (2cDM) model. A large set of velocity-dependent cross-section prescriptions for elastic scattering and mass conversions, and , has been explored and the results were compared with observational data. The results demonstrate that self-interactions with the cross-section per particle mass evaluated at km s being in the range of cmg…
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