Astrophysical Tests of Dark Matter Self-Interactions
Self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) arises generically in scenarios for physics beyond the Standard Model that have dark sectors with light mediators or strong dynamics. The self-interactions allow energy and momentum transport through halos, altering their structure and dynamics relative to those p...
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Zusammenfassung: | Self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) arises generically in scenarios for
physics beyond the Standard Model that have dark sectors with light mediators
or strong dynamics. The self-interactions allow energy and momentum transport
through halos, altering their structure and dynamics relative to those produced
by collisionless dark matter. SIDM models provide a promising way to explain
the diversity of galactic rotation curves, and they form a predictive and
versatile framework for interpreting astrophysical phenomena related to dark
matter. This review provides a comprehensive explanation of the physical
effects of dark matter self-interactions in objects ranging from galactic
satellites (dark and luminous) to clusters of galaxies and the large-scale
structure. The second major part describes the methods used to constrain SIDM
models including current constraints, with the aim of advancing tests with
upcoming galaxy surveys. This part also provides a detailed review of the
unresolved small-scale structure formation issues and concrete ways to test
simple SIDM models. The review is rounded off by a discussion of the
theoretical motivation for self-interactions, degeneracies with baryonic and
gravitational effects, extensions to the single-component elastic-interactions
SIDM framework, and future observational and theoretical prospects. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2207.10638 |