TY - JOUR
T1 - Galactic rotation curves versus ultralight dark matter
T2 - Implications of the soliton-host halo relation
AU - Bar, Nitsan
AU - Blas, Diego
AU - Blum, Kfir
AU - Sibiryakov, Sergey
N1 - We thank James Hung-Hsu Chan, Josh Eby, Lam Hui, Dmitry Levkov, Moti Milgrom, Eran Ofek, Alexander Panin, and Igor Tkachev for discussions, and Yossi Nir, Scott Tremaine, and Eli Waxman for comments on an early version of the draft. K. B. thanks the participants of the VBSM Polynesia workshop, where part of this work was conducted, for useful discussions. K. B. is incumbent of the Dewey David Stone and Harry Levine career development chair. The work of K. B. and N. B. is supported by Grant No. 1937/12 from the I-CORE program of the Planning and Budgeting Committee and the Israel Science Foundation and by Grant No. 1507/16 from the Israel Science Foundation. S. S. is grateful to Columbia University for hospitality during completion of this work.
PY - 2018/10/31
Y1 - 2018/10/31
N2 - Bosonic ultralight dark matter (ULDM) would form cored density distributions at the center of galaxies. These cores, seen in numerical simulations, admit analytic description as the lowest energy bound state solution ("soliton") of the Schroedinger-Poisson equations. Numerical simulations of ULDM galactic halos find empirical scaling relations between the mass of the large-scale host halo and the mass of the central soliton. We discuss how the simulation results of different groups can be understood in terms of the basic properties of the soliton. Importantly, simulations imply that the energy per unit mass in the soliton and in the virialized host halo should be approximately equal. This relation lends itself to observational tests because it predicts that the peak circular velocity, measured for the host halo in the outskirts of the galaxy, should approximately repeat itself in the central region. Contrasting this prediction with the measured rotation curves of well-resolved nearby galaxies, we show that ULDM in the mass range m similar to (10(-22) divided by 10(-21)) eV, which has been invoked as a possible solution to the small-scale puzzles of Lambda CDM, is in tension with the data. We suggest that a dedicated analysis of the Milky Way inner gravitational potential could probe ULDM up to m less than or similar to 10(-19) eV.
AB - Bosonic ultralight dark matter (ULDM) would form cored density distributions at the center of galaxies. These cores, seen in numerical simulations, admit analytic description as the lowest energy bound state solution ("soliton") of the Schroedinger-Poisson equations. Numerical simulations of ULDM galactic halos find empirical scaling relations between the mass of the large-scale host halo and the mass of the central soliton. We discuss how the simulation results of different groups can be understood in terms of the basic properties of the soliton. Importantly, simulations imply that the energy per unit mass in the soliton and in the virialized host halo should be approximately equal. This relation lends itself to observational tests because it predicts that the peak circular velocity, measured for the host halo in the outskirts of the galaxy, should approximately repeat itself in the central region. Contrasting this prediction with the measured rotation curves of well-resolved nearby galaxies, we show that ULDM in the mass range m similar to (10(-22) divided by 10(-21)) eV, which has been invoked as a possible solution to the small-scale puzzles of Lambda CDM, is in tension with the data. We suggest that a dedicated analysis of the Milky Way inner gravitational potential could probe ULDM up to m less than or similar to 10(-19) eV.
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.083027
DO - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.083027
M3 - مقالة
SN - 2470-0010
VL - 98
JO - Physical review D
JF - Physical review D
IS - 8
M1 - 083027
ER -