Deep zoom-in simulation of a fuzzy dark matter galactic halo
Bodo Schwabe, Jens C. Niemeyer

TL;DR
This paper introduces an advanced simulation method for fuzzy dark matter, enabling high-resolution studies of galactic halos that reveal wave interference effects and solitonic core formation.
Contribution
It presents a new reconstruction technique for wave functions in FDM simulations, improving resolution and accuracy in modeling galactic structures.
Findings
Achieved effective resolution of 20 pc in a cosmological simulation.
Simulated a galactic halo with parameters close to those relevant for galaxy evolution.
Demonstrated wave interference effects and solitonic core formation in FDM halos.
Abstract
Fuzzy dark matter (FDM) made of ultra-light bosonic particles is a viable alternative to cold dark matter (CDM) with clearly distinguishable small-scale features in collapsed structures. On large scales, it behaves gravitationally like CDM deviating only by a cut-off in the initial power spectrum and can be studied using N-body methods. In contrast, wave interference effects near the de Broglie scale result in new phenomena unique to FDM. Interfering modes in filaments and halos yield a stochastically oscillating granular structure which condenses into solitonic cores during halo formation. Investigating these highly non-linear wave phenomena requires the spatially resolved numerical integration of the Schr\"odinger equation. In previous papers we introduced a hybrid zoom-in scheme that combines N-body methods to model the large-scale gravitational potential around and the mass…
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