Survival of the most compact: the life and death of satellite halos in self-interacting dark matter
David Klemmer, Moritz S. Fischer, Kimberly K. Boddy, Manoj Kaplinghat, Laura Sagunski

TL;DR
This paper develops a cost-effective simulation framework to study the evolution of satellite halos in self-interacting dark matter models, revealing diverse density profiles influenced by environmental interactions and scattering properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, less computationally intensive simulation method that accurately models subhalo evolution and interactions in SIDM scenarios, including tidal effects and velocity distributions.
Findings
SIDM subhalos exhibit a wider range of central densities and density slopes.
Environmental effects significantly influence subhalo structural evolution.
The simulation framework enables realistic modeling of SIDM subhalos in complex environments.
Abstract
Self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) models feature short-range interactions between dark matter (DM) particles that lead to larger diversity in the inner parts of galactic rotation curves and potentially unique gravitational lensing signatures. Satellite galaxies and dark subhalos provide a valuable testing ground for such models. We develop a simulation framework to explore subhalo evolution and its gravothermal collapse for velocity- and angle-dependent self-interacting cross section in these SIDM models. Our results are essential for testing these models. We perform N-body simulations, treating the host halo analytically and modelling the scattering-induced subhalo-halo interaction process using virtual host particles, a central innovation of our work. We use the Eddington inversion method to accurately model the local velocity distribution in the halo. Our approach is significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
