Core Formation in Dwarf Halos with Self Interacting Dark Matter: No Fine-Tuning Necessary
Abstract: We investigate the effect of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the density profiles of $V_{\rm max} \simeq 40~km~s{-1}$ isolated dwarf dark matter halos -- the scale of relevance for the too big to fail problem (TBTF) -- using very high-resolution cosmological zoom simulations. Each halo has millions of particles within its virial radius. We find that SIDM models with cross sections per unit mass spanning the range \sigma/m = $0.5 - 50$ $cm2~g{-1}$ alleviate TBTF and produce constant density cores of size 300-1000 pc, comparable to the half-light radii of $M_\star$ ~ $10{5-7}$ $M_\odot$ dwarfs. The largest, lowest density cores develop for cross sections in the middle of this range, \sigma/m ~ $5-10~cm2~g{-1}$. Our largest SIDM cross section run (\sigma/m = $50~cm2~g{-1}$) develops a slightly denser core owing to mild core-collapse behavior, but it remains less dense than the CDM case and retains a constant density core profile. Our work suggests that SIDM cross sections as large or larger than $50~cm2~g{-1}$ remain viable on velocity scales of dwarf galaxies ($v_{\rm rms}$ ~ $40~km~s{-1}$). The range of SIDM cross sections that alleviate TBTF and the cusp/core problem spans at least two orders of magnitude and therefore need not be particularly fine-tuned.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.