Parkes Pulsar Timing Array constraints on ultralight scalar-field dark matter
Nataliya K. Porayko, Xingjiang Zhu, Yuri Levin, Lam Hui, George Hobbs,, Aleksandra Grudskaya, Konstantin Postnov, Matthew Bailes, N. D. Ramesh Bhat,, William Coles, Shi Dai, James Dempsey, Michael J. Keith, Matthew Kerr,, Michael Kramer, Paul D. Lasky, Richard N. Manchester

TL;DR
This study uses data from the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array to search for ultralight scalar-field dark matter, setting new upper limits on its local density and discussing future detection prospects.
Contribution
First to analyze PPTA data for ultralight scalar dark matter, providing improved constraints on its density in the Milky Way.
Findings
No significant detection of ultralight dark matter was found.
Upper limits on dark matter density were improved by a factor of two to five.
Constraints exclude densities above 6 GeV/cm³ for masses below 10^{-23} eV.
Abstract
It is widely accepted that dark matter contributes about a quarter of the critical mass-energy density in our Universe. The nature of dark matter is currently unknown, with the mass of possible constituents spanning nearly one hundred orders of magnitude. The ultralight scalar field dark matter, consisting of extremely light bosons with eV and often called "fuzzy" dark matter, provides intriguing solutions to some challenges at sub-Galactic scales for the standard cold dark matter model. As shown by Khmelnitsky and Rubakov, such a scalar field in the Galaxy would produce an oscillating gravitational potential with nanohertz frequencies, resulting in periodic variations in the times of arrival of radio pulses from pulsars. The Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (PPTA) has been monitoring 20 millisecond pulsars at two to three weeks intervals for more than a decade. In addition…
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