On the Random Motion of Nuclear Objects in a Fuzzy Dark Matter Halo
Dhruba Dutta Chowdhury, Frank C. van den Bosch, Victor H. Robles,, Pieter van Dokkum, Hsi-Yu Schive, Tzihong Chiueh, and Tom Broadhurst

TL;DR
This paper investigates how ultralight bosonic dark matter causes oscillations in the central soliton of halos, leading to gravitational perturbations that can displace nuclear objects like black holes and star clusters over billions of years.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution simulations showing the impact of soliton oscillations on nuclear objects and introduces an effective kinetic theory model for their diffusion.
Findings
Objects less than 0.3% of soliton mass are expelled in ~3 Gyr.
More massive objects remain confined due to dynamical friction.
Displacements of star clusters and AGNs can constrain FDM properties.
Abstract
Fuzzy Dark Matter (FDM), consisting of ultralight bosons (), is an intriguing alternative to Cold Dark Matter. Numerical simulations that solve the Schr\"odinger-Poisson (SP) equation show that FDM halos consist of a central solitonic core, which is the ground state of the SP equation, surrounded by an envelope of interfering excited states. These excited states also interfere with the soliton, causing it to oscillate and execute a confined random walk with respect to the halo center of mass. Using high-resolution numerical simulations of a FDM halo with in isolation, we demonstrate that the wobbling, oscillating soliton gravitationally perturbs nuclear objects, such as supermassive black holes or dense star clusters, causing them to diffuse outwards. In particular, we show that, on…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
