
TL;DR
Wave dark matter, composed of ultra-light bosons, exhibits wave-like phenomena such as interference, vortices, and solitons, leading to distinctive astrophysical signatures and influencing detection strategies.
Contribution
This review synthesizes the physics, phenomenology, and observational implications of wave dark matter, highlighting recent theoretical insights and open questions.
Findings
Wave interference causes density fluctuations and vortices.
Soliton formation occurs at halo centers for low-mass dark matter.
Interference structures can be probed by gravitational lensing and tidal streams.
Abstract
We review the physics and phenomenology of wave dark matter: a bosonic dark matter candidate lighter than about 30 eV. Such particles have a de Broglie wavelength exceeding the average inter-particle separation in a galaxy like the Milky Way, and are well described as classical waves. We outline the particle physics motivations for them, including the QCD axion and ultra-light axion-like-particles such as fuzzy dark matter. The wave nature of the dark matter implies a rich phenomenology: (1) Wave interference leads to order unity density fluctuations on de Broglie scale. A manifestation is vortices where the density vanishes and around which the velocity circulates. There is one vortex ring per de Broglie volume on average. (2) For sufficiently low masses, soliton condensation occurs at centers of halos. The soliton oscillates and random walks, another manifestation of wave…
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