Strong lensing signatures of self-interacting dark matter in low-mass halos
Daniel Gilman, Jo Bovy, Tommaso Treu, Anna Nierenberg, Simon Birrer,, Andrew Benson, Omid Sameie

TL;DR
This paper shows that strong gravitational lensing flux ratios can detect and constrain the properties of self-interacting dark matter in low-mass halos, especially at velocities below 30 km/s, providing new insights into dark matter physics.
Contribution
It introduces a forward modeling inference framework to use lensing flux ratios for constraining SIDM cross sections at low velocities, a regime previously less explored.
Findings
Forecasts constraints on SIDM cross section amplitude at 20 km/s.
Demonstrates potential to rule out CDM with high likelihood ratios.
Shows strong lensing can probe SIDM structure evolution over cosmic time.
Abstract
Core formation and runaway core collapse in models with self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) significantly alter the central density profiles of collapsed halos. Using a forward modeling inference framework with simulated datasets, we demonstrate that flux ratios in quadruple image strong gravitational lenses can detect the unique structural properties of SIDM halos, and statistically constrain the amplitude and velocity dependence of the interaction cross section in halos with masses between . Measurements on these scales probe self-interactions at velocities below , a relatively unexplored regime of parameter space, complimenting constraints at higher velocities from galaxies and clusters. We cast constraints on the amplitude and velocity dependence of the interaction cross section in terms of , the cross section…
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