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Many aspects of the large-scale structure of the Universe can be described successfully using cosmological models in which 271% of the critical mass-energy density consists of cold dark matter (CDM). However, few---if any---of the predictions of CDM models have been successful on scales of 10 kpc or less. This lack of success is usually explained by the difficulty of modeling baryonic physics (star formation, supernova and black-hole feedback, etc. ). An intriguing alternative to CDM is that the dark matter is an extremely light (m10^-22 eV) boson having a de Broglie wavelength 1 kpc, often called fuzzy dark matter (FDM). We describe the arguments from particle physics that motivate FDM, review previous work on its astrophysical signatures, and analyze several unexplored aspects of its behavior. In particular, (i) FDM halos or subhalos smaller than about 10^7 (m/10^-22 eV) ^-3/2 M_ do not form, and the abundance of halos smaller than a few times 10^10 (m/10^-22 eV) ^-4/3 M_ is substantially smaller in FDM than in CDM. (ii) FDM halos are comprised of a central core that is a stationary, minimum-energy solution of the Schr\"odinger-Poisson equation, sometimes called a ``soliton, '' surrounded by an envelope that resembles a CDM halo. The soliton can produce a distinct signature in the rotation curves of FDM-dominated systems. (iii) The transition between soliton and envelope is determined by a relaxation process analogous to two-body relaxation in gravitating N-body systems, which proceeds as if the halo were composed of particles with mass ^3 where is the halo density. (iv) Relaxation may have substantial effects on the stellar disk and bulge in the inner parts of disk galaxies, but has negligible effect on disk thickening or globular cluster disruption near the solar radius. (v) Relaxation can produce FDM disks but a FDM disk in the solar neighborhood must have a half-thickness of at least 300 (m/10^-22 eV) ^-2/3 pc and a midplane density less than 0. 2 (m/10^-22 eV) ^2/3 times the baryonic disk density. (vi) Solitonic FDM subhalos evaporate by tunneling through the tidal radius and this limits the minimum subhalo mass inside 30 kpc of the Milky Way to a few times 10^8 (m/10^-22 eV) ^-3/2 M_. (vii) If the dark matter in the Fornax dwarf galaxy is composed of CDM, most of the globular clusters observed in that galaxy should have long ago spiraled to its center, and this problem is resolved if the dark matter is FDM. (viii) FDM delays galaxy formation relative to CDM but its galaxy-formation history is consistent with current observations of high-redshift galaxies and the late reionization observed by Planck. If the dark matter is composed of FDM, most observations favor a particle mass 10^-22 eV and the most significant observational consequences occur if the mass is in the range 1--1010^-22 eV. There is tension with observations of the Lyman- forest, which favor m10--2010^-22 eV and we discuss whether more sophisticated models of reionization may resolve this tension.
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Lam Hui
Center for Theoretical Physics
Jeremiah P. Ostriker
Australian National University
Scott Tremaine
Institute for Advanced Study
Physical review. D/Physical review. D.
Columbia University
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Hui et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d760eeb843b2be9948f747 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.95.043541