Published February 15, 2023 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Orbital evolution of satellite galaxies in self-interacting dark matter models

  • 1. ROR icon Princeton University
  • 2. ROR icon New York University
  • 3. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 4. ROR icon Carnegie Observatories
  • 5. ROR icon University of California, Irvine

Abstract

Dark matter self-interactions can leave distinctive signatures on the properties of satellite galaxies around Milky Way–like hosts through their impact on tidal stripping, ram pressure, and gravothermal collapse. We delineate the regions of self-interacting dark matter parameter space — specified by interaction cross section and a velocity scale — where each of these effects dominates and show how the relative mass loss depends on the satellite's initial mass, density profile, and orbit. We obtain novel, conservative constraints in this parameter space using Milky Way satellite galaxies with notably high central densities and small pericenter distances. Our results for self-interacting dark matter models, in combination with constraints from clusters of galaxies, favor either velocity-dependent cross sections that lead to gravothermal core collapse in the densest satellites or small cross sections which more closely resemble cold and collisionless dark matter.

Additional Information

© 2023 American Physical Society. The authors gratefully acknowledge S. Carlsten, J. Greene, E. Nadler, and P. Natarajan for useful conversations. F. J. is supported by the Troesh Scholarship at Caltech. M. K. is supported by the NSF under Grant No. 1915005. M. L. and O. S. are supported by the DOE under Award No. DE-SC0007968 and the Binational Science Foundation (Grant No. 2018140). O. S. is also supported by the NSF (Grant No. PHY-1915409).

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Published - PhysRevD.107.043014.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
121484
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20230522-906270000.17

Funding

Troesh Family Foundation
NSF
PHY-1915005
Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-SC0007968
Binational Science Foundation (USA-Israel)
2018140
NSF
PHY-1915409

Dates

Created
2023-07-05
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2023-07-05
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

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TAPIR