6 research outputs found
Galactic cold dark matter as a Bose-Einstein condensate of WISPs
We propose here the dark matter content of galaxies as a cold bosonic fluid
composed of Weakly Interacting Slim Particles (WISPs), represented by spin-0
axion-like particles and spin-1 hidden bosons, thermalized in the Bose-Einstein
condensation state and bounded by their self-gravitational potential. We
analyze two zero-momentum configurations: the polar phases in which spin
alignment of two neighbouring particles is anti-parallel and the ferromagnetic
phases in which every particle spin is aligned in the same direction. Using the
mean field approximation we derive the Gross-Pitaevskii equations for both
cases, and, supposing the dark matter to be a polytropic fluid, we describe the
particles density profile as Thomas-Fermi distributions characterized by the
halo radii and in terms of the scattering lengths and mass of each particle. By
comparing this model with data obtained from 42 spiral galaxies and 19 Low
Surface Brightness (LSB) galaxies, we constrain the dark matter particle mass
to the range and we find the lower bound for the
scattering length to be of the order .Comment: 13 pages; 6 figures; references added; v.3: typo corrected in the
abstract, published in JCA