4.6 Article

Simulating Atomic Dark Matter in Milky Way Analogs

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 954, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ace2c8

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This study demonstrates that even a small fraction of dissipative dark matter can significantly impact galactic evolution. The simulations show that dark matter with standard model-like masses and couplings can cool to form a rotating dark disk and a prominent bulge in the central galaxy.
Dark sector theories naturally lead to multicomponent scenarios for dark matter where a subcomponent can dissipate energy through self-interactions, allowing it to efficiently cool inside galaxies. We present the first cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of Milky Way analogs where the majority of dark matter is collisionless cold dark matter (CDM) but a subcomponent (6%) is strongly dissipative minimal atomic dark matter (ADM). The simulations, implemented in GIZMO and utilizing FIRE-2 galaxy formation physics to model the standard baryonic sector, demonstrate that the addition of even a small fraction of dissipative dark matter can significantly impact galactic evolution despite being consistent with current cosmological constraints. We show that ADM gas with roughly standard model-like masses and couplings can cool to form a rotating dark disk with angular momentum closely aligned with the visible stellar disk. The morphology of the disk depends sensitively on the parameters of the ADM model, which affect the cooling rates in the dark sector. The majority of the ADM gas gravitationally collapses into dark clumps (regions of black hole or mirror star formation), which form a prominent bulge and a rotating thick disk in the central galaxy. These clumps form early and quickly sink to the inner similar to kiloparsec of the galaxy, affecting the galaxy's star formation history and present-day baryonic and CDM distributions.

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