TY - JOUR
T1 - Detection of a universal core-halo transition in dwarf galaxies as predicted by Bose-Einstein dark matter
AU - Pozo, Alvaro
AU - Broadhurst, Tom
AU - De Martino, Ivan
AU - Chiueh, Tzihong
AU - Smoot, George F.
AU - Bonoli, Silvia
AU - Angulo, Raul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 us. 2024 American Physical Society.
PY - 2024/8/15
Y1 - 2024/8/15
N2 - Recent discoveries of large halos of stars and dark matter around some of the lowest mass galaxies defy expectations that dwarf galaxies should be small and dense. Here we find large halos are a general feature of the well known dwarfs orbiting the Milky Way and also for the isolated dwarfs in the Local Group. Furthermore, these halos are seen to surround a dense core within each dwarf, with a clear density transition visible between the core and the halo at a radius of ≃1.0 kpc. This common core-halo structure is hard to understand for standard heavy particle dark matter where featureless, concentrated profiles are predicted, whereas dark matter as a Bose-Einstein condensate, ψDM, naturally accounts for the observed profiles, predicting a dense soliton core in every galaxy surrounded by a tenuous halo of interfering waves. We show that the stellar profiles are accurately fitted by the core-halo structure of ψDM, with only one fixed parameter, the boson mass. We also find independent consistency with the stellar velocity dispersions measured in these dwarf galaxies, which peak at the core radius and fall in the halo, at a level consistent with a boson mass of ≃1.5×10-22 eV, based on independent dynamical work. Hence, dark matter comprised of light bosons, such as the axions generic in string theory, provides a compelling solution for the structure of dwarf galaxies with stars that simply trace the dark matter profile of a Bose-Einstein condensate.
AB - Recent discoveries of large halos of stars and dark matter around some of the lowest mass galaxies defy expectations that dwarf galaxies should be small and dense. Here we find large halos are a general feature of the well known dwarfs orbiting the Milky Way and also for the isolated dwarfs in the Local Group. Furthermore, these halos are seen to surround a dense core within each dwarf, with a clear density transition visible between the core and the halo at a radius of ≃1.0 kpc. This common core-halo structure is hard to understand for standard heavy particle dark matter where featureless, concentrated profiles are predicted, whereas dark matter as a Bose-Einstein condensate, ψDM, naturally accounts for the observed profiles, predicting a dense soliton core in every galaxy surrounded by a tenuous halo of interfering waves. We show that the stellar profiles are accurately fitted by the core-halo structure of ψDM, with only one fixed parameter, the boson mass. We also find independent consistency with the stellar velocity dispersions measured in these dwarf galaxies, which peak at the core radius and fall in the halo, at a level consistent with a boson mass of ≃1.5×10-22 eV, based on independent dynamical work. Hence, dark matter comprised of light bosons, such as the axions generic in string theory, provides a compelling solution for the structure of dwarf galaxies with stars that simply trace the dark matter profile of a Bose-Einstein condensate.
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001306781100005
UR - https://openalex.org/W3094201953
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85204454860
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.110.043534
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.110.043534
M3 - Journal Article
SN - 2470-0010
VL - 110
JO - Physical Review D
JF - Physical Review D
IS - 4
M1 - 043534
ER -