95 research outputs found
Formation and Evolution of Self-Interacting Dark Matter Halos
We study the formation and evolution of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM)
halos. We find analytical, fully cosmological similarity solutions taking
account of the collisional interaction of SIDM particles. This interaction
results in a thermal conductivity that heats the halo core and flattens its
density profile. These similarity solutions are relevant to galactic and
cluster halo formation in the CDM model. We assume an initial mass profile dM/M
M^{-eps}, as in the familiar secondary infall model. If eps=1/6, SIDM halos
will evolve self-similarly, with a cold, supersonic infall terminated by a
strong accretion shock. Different solutions arise for different values of the
collisionality parameter, Q= sigma rho_b r_s, where sigma is the scattering
cross section, rho_b is the cosmic mean density, and r_s is the shock radius.
For all these solutions, a flat-density, isothermal core is present which grows
in size as a fixed fraction of r_s. We find two different regimes for these
solutions: 1) for Q \leq Q_{th}, the core density decreases and core size
increases as Q increases; 2) for Q \geq Q_{th}, the core density increases and
core size decreases as Q increases. Our similarity solutions are in agreement
with previous N-body simulations of SIDM halos, which correspond to the low-Q
regime, if Q=[8.4e-4 - 4.9e-2]Q_{th} (low-Q), or sigma=[0.56-5.6]cm^2/g. As
Q=\infty, our similarity solution aquires a central density cusp, in agreement
with some simulation results which used an ordinary collisional fluid to
approximate the effects of SIDM collisionality. When Q=[18.6-231]Q_{th} or
sigma=[1.2e4 - 2.71e4]cm^2/g, for which we find flat-density cores comparable
to those of the observationally acceptable low-Q solutions, has not previously
been identified. Further study of this regime is warranted.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, talk presented at the Second Korean Astrophysics
Workshop (APCTP Workshop) on Formation and Interaction of Galaxies, published
in a special issue of Journal of Korean Astronomical Society, ed. H. M Le
Small-scale Effects of Thermal Inflation on Halo Abundance at High-, Galaxy Substructure Abundance and 21-cm Power Spectrum
We study the impact of thermal inflation on the formation of cosmological
structures and present astrophysical observables which can be used to constrain
and possibly probe the thermal inflation scenario. These are dark matter halo
abundance at high redshifts, satellite galaxy abundance in the Milky Way, and
fluctuation in the 21-cm radiation background before the epoch of reionization.
The thermal inflation scenario leaves a characteristic signature on the matter
power spectrum by boosting the amplitude at a specific wavenumber determined by
the number of e-foldings during thermal inflation (), and strongly
suppressing the amplitude for modes at smaller scales. For a reasonable range
of parameter space, one of the consequences is the suppression of minihalo
formation at high redshifts and that of satellite galaxies in the Milky Way.
While this effect is substantial, it is degenerate with other cosmological or
astrophysical effects. The power spectrum of the 21-cm background probes this
impact more directly, and its observation may be the best way to constrain the
thermal inflation scenario due to the characteristic signature in the power
spectrum. The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) in phase 1 (SKA1) has sensitivity
large enough to achieve this goal for models with if a
10000-hr observation is performed. The final phase SKA, with anticipated
sensitivity about an order of magnitude higher, seems more promising and will
cover a wider parameter space.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figure
Probing the Global 21-cm Signal via the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe Effect on the 21-cm Background
We propose a novel method to probe the global 21-cm background. This
background experiences the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect (ISW) as the cosmic
microwave background does. The 21-cm ISW is modulated by the spectral shape of
the global 21-cm signal, and thus the measure of the 21-cm ISW will be a probe
of the evolution of the global signal. With the phase-1 SKA telescope, probing
the global 21-cm background would be feasible with 10000-hour observation,
enabling consistency checks with existing measures of the global 21-cm signal
by EDGES and SARAS that are conflicting with each other.Comment: submitted to PRL; 6 pages, 2 figures + supplemental materia
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