Dynamical friction in Bose-Einstein condensed self-interacting dark matter at finite temperatures, and the Fornax dwarf spheroidal
S. T. H. Hartman, H. A. Winther, D. F. Mota

TL;DR
This study investigates how dynamical friction affects objects in a finite-temperature superfluid dark matter model, using theoretical and numerical methods, and applies findings to the Fornax dwarf galaxy to constrain dark matter properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of dynamical friction in finite-temperature superfluid dark matter, including the effects of thermal contributions and critical velocity, with implications for galaxy observations.
Findings
Dynamical friction behaves similarly to the zero-temperature case even at finite temperatures.
Including a critical velocity can cause a transition from superfluid to normal fluid behavior.
Finite-temperature effects may lead to shorter decay times, challenging existing superfluid dark matter models.
Abstract
The aim of the present work is to better understand the gravitational drag forces, i.e. dynamical friction, acting on massive objects moving through a self-interacting Bose-Einstein condensate, also known as a superfluid, at finite temperatures. This is relevant for light scalar models of dark matter with weak self-interactions that require nonzero temperatures, or that have been heated inside galaxies. We derived expressions for dynamical friction using linear perturbation theory, and compared these to numerical simulations in which nonlinear effects are included. After testing the linear result, it was applied to the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy, and two of its gravitationally bound globular clusters. Dwarf spheroidals are well-suited for indirectly probing properties of dark matter, and so by estimating the rate at which these globular clusters are expected to sink into their host…
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