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Dwarf spheroidal galaxies and Bose-Einstein condensate dark matter

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abstract

We constrain the parameters of a self-interacting massive dark matter scalar particle in a condensate using the kinematics of the eight brightest dwarf spheroidal satellites of the Milky Way. For the case of a repulsive self-interaction the condensate develops a mass density profile with a characteristic scale radius that is closely related to the fundamental parameters of the theory. We find that the velocity dispersion of dwarf spheroidal galaxies suggests a scale radius of the order of 1 kpc, in tension with previous results found using the rotational curve of low-surface-brightness and dwarf galaxies. The new value is however favored marginally by the constraints coming from the number of relativistic species at Big-Bang nucleosynthesis. We discuss the implications of our findings for the particle dark matter model and argue that while a single classical coherent state can correctly describe the dark matter in dwarf spheroidal galaxies, it cannot play, in general, a relevant role for the description of dark matter in bigger objects.

fields

astro-ph.GA 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Dwarf Galaxy Constraints on Interacting Fermionic Dark Matter

astro-ph.GA · 2026-05-21 · unverdicted · novelty 5.0

MCMC fits of degenerate fermionic dark matter models to eight classical dwarf spheroidal galaxies constrain fermion masses to 100-300 eV and show current data do not strongly favor interacting over non-interacting equations of state.

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  • Dwarf Galaxy Constraints on Interacting Fermionic Dark Matter astro-ph.GA · 2026-05-21 · unverdicted · none · ref 23 · internal anchor

    MCMC fits of degenerate fermionic dark matter models to eight classical dwarf spheroidal galaxies constrain fermion masses to 100-300 eV and show current data do not strongly favor interacting over non-interacting equations of state.