Relaxation in a Fuzzy Dark Matter Halo
Ben Bar-Or, Jean-Baptiste Fouvry, and Scott Tremaine

TL;DR
This paper investigates how wave-like fuzzy dark matter causes stochastic gravitational fluctuations that lead to orbital diffusion of stars and black holes, affecting galaxy dynamics and offering a way to constrain dark matter particle mass.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative analysis of relaxation caused by FDM fluctuations, modeling them as quasiparticles and applying classical relaxation tools to fuzzy dark matter halos.
Findings
FDM fluctuations act as quasiparticles with effective mass depending on radius and particle mass.
Relaxation can stall black hole inspirals and heat galaxy centers.
Method provides a new way to constrain the mass of fuzzy dark matter particles.
Abstract
Dark matter may be composed of light bosons, , with a de Broglie wavelength in typical galactic potentials. Such `fuzzy' dark matter (FDM) behaves like cold dark matter (CDM) on much larger scales than the de Broglie wavelength, but may resolve some of the challenges faced by CDM in explaining the properties of galaxies on small scales (). Because of its wave nature, FDM exhibits stochastic density fluctuations on the scale of the de Broglie wavelength that never damp. The gravitational field from these fluctuations scatters stars and black holes, causing their orbits to diffuse through phase space. We show that this relaxation process can be analyzed quantitatively with the same tools used to analyze classical two-body relaxation in an -body system, and can be described by treating the FDM…
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