Gravothermal collapse and the diversity of galactic rotation curves
M. Grant Roberts, Manoj Kaplinghat, Mauro Valli, Hai-Bo Yu

TL;DR
This paper investigates how strong dark matter self-interactions with a large cross section can cause gravothermal collapse in galactic halos, explaining the diversity of observed rotation curves and accommodating high-density outliers.
Contribution
It demonstrates that large SIDM cross sections induce gravothermal collapse, naturally explaining the wide range of galactic rotation curve densities and unifying previously outlier observations.
Findings
Strong SIDM can cause gravothermal collapse within 10 Gyr.
Large SIDM cross sections fit diverse galaxy rotation curves.
Outliers in high-density halos are explained by collapse phase.
Abstract
The rotation curves of spiral galaxies exhibit a great diversity that challenge our understanding of galaxy formation and the nature of dark matter. Previous studies showed that in self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) models with a cross section per unit mass of , the predicted dark matter central densities are a good match to the observed densities in galaxies. In this work, we explore a regime with a larger cross section of in dwarf galactic halos. We will show that such strong dark matter self-interactions can further amplify the diversity of halo densities inherited from their assembly history. High concentration halos can enter the gravothermal collapse phase within , resulting in a high density, while low concentration ones remain in the expansion phase and have a low density. We fit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
