Resolving the Core-Cusp and Diversity Problems with a Baryon-Correlated Dark Matter Profile
Kento Kamada

TL;DR
This paper proposes a baryon-correlated dark matter profile that explains galaxy rotation curves and resolves core-cusp and diversity problems using observed baryonic profiles, with a new empirical law linking dark matter density to baryonic potential.
Contribution
Introduces a novel empirical dark matter profile correlated with baryons, successfully fitting galaxy rotation curves and addressing small-scale challenges.
Findings
Reproduces observed rotation curves of 91 galaxies.
Resolves core-cusp and diversity problems with baryonic data.
Narrow range of fitted parameter K across galaxies.
Abstract
The rotation velocity profiles of galaxies (rotation curves) remain unexpectedly flat at large distances, where visible matter alone should make the rotation velocity decrease with radius. Conventionally, this requires a large amount of unseen dark matter. However, standard dark matter models face persistent small-scale challenges, such as the core-cusp and diversity problems, and struggle to explain the observed correlation between dark matter and baryons. Here, we introduce a simple empirical law for the dark matter distribution, stating that the effective dark matter energy density is directly correlated with the baryonic gravitational potential with the relation of in the rest frame of the galaxy. This leads to a Poisson equation for the total gravitational potential , \[ \nabla^2\Phi_{\rm tot} = 4\pi…
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