TL;DR
This paper investigates two-scalar Bose-Einstein Condensates at stellar and galactic scales, analyzing stability, interactions, and potential observational signatures, including gravitational waves and dark matter profiles.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive numerical study of two interacting scalars in BECs, revealing unique stability properties and implications for astrophysical phenomena.
Findings
Repulsive scalar interactions stabilize high-compactness BECs.
Two-scalar BECs can address galactic core scaling problems.
Potential gravitational wave signals from scalar interactions.
Abstract
We study the properties of Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) systems consisting of two scalars, focusing on both the case where the BEC is stellar scale as well as the case when it is galactic scale. After studying the stability of such systems and making contact with existing single scalar limits, we undertake a numerical study of the two interacting scalars using Einstein-Klein-Gordon (EKG) equations, including both non-gravitational self-interactions and interactions between the species. We show that the presence of extra scalars and possible interactions between them can leave unique imprints on the BEC system mass profile, especially when the system transitions from being dominated by one scalar to being dominated by the other. At stellar scales (nonlinear regime,) we observe that a repulsive interaction between the two scalars of the type can stabilize the BEC…
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