We present an analysis of the effects of dissipational baryonic physics on the local dark matter (DM) distribution at the location of the Sun, with an emphasis on the consequences for direct detection experiments. Our work is based on a comparative analysis of two cosmological simulations with identical initial conditions of a Milky Way halo, one of which (Eris) is a full hydrodynamic simulation and the other (ErisDark) is a DM-only one. We find that in Eris two distinct processes lead to a 30% enhancement of DM in the disk plane at the location of the Sun: the accretion and disruption of satellites resulting in a DM component with net angular momentum, and the contraction of baryons pulling the DM into the disk plane without forcing it to co-rotate. Owing to its particularly quiescent merger history for dark halos of Milky Way mass, the co-rotating dark disk in Eris is less massive than what has been suggested by previous work, contributing only 9% of the local DM density. Yet, since the simulation results in a realistic Milky Way analog galaxy, its DM halo provides a plausible alternative to the Maxwellian standard halo model (SHM) commonly used in direct detection analyses. The speed distribution in Eris is broadened and shifted to higher speeds, compared to its DM-only twin simulation ErisDark. At high speeds f(v) falls more steeply in Eris than in ErisDark or the SHM, easing the tension between recent results from the CDMS-II and XENON100 experiments. The non-Maxwellian aspects of f(v) are still present, but much less pronounced in Eris than in the DM-only runs. The weak dark disk increases the time-averaged scattering rate by only a few percent at low recoil energies. On the high velocity tail, however, the increase in typical speeds due to baryonic contraction results in strongly enhanced mean scattering rates compared to ErisDark, although they are still suppressed compared to the SHM. Similar trends are seen regarding the amplitude of the annual modulation, while the modulated fraction is increased compared to the SHM and decreased compared to ErisDark.

Pillepich, A., Kuhlen, M., Guedes, J., Madau, P. (2014). The distribution of dark matter in the milky way's disk. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 784(2) [10.1088/0004-637x/784/2/161].

The distribution of dark matter in the milky way's disk

Madau P.
2014

Abstract

We present an analysis of the effects of dissipational baryonic physics on the local dark matter (DM) distribution at the location of the Sun, with an emphasis on the consequences for direct detection experiments. Our work is based on a comparative analysis of two cosmological simulations with identical initial conditions of a Milky Way halo, one of which (Eris) is a full hydrodynamic simulation and the other (ErisDark) is a DM-only one. We find that in Eris two distinct processes lead to a 30% enhancement of DM in the disk plane at the location of the Sun: the accretion and disruption of satellites resulting in a DM component with net angular momentum, and the contraction of baryons pulling the DM into the disk plane without forcing it to co-rotate. Owing to its particularly quiescent merger history for dark halos of Milky Way mass, the co-rotating dark disk in Eris is less massive than what has been suggested by previous work, contributing only 9% of the local DM density. Yet, since the simulation results in a realistic Milky Way analog galaxy, its DM halo provides a plausible alternative to the Maxwellian standard halo model (SHM) commonly used in direct detection analyses. The speed distribution in Eris is broadened and shifted to higher speeds, compared to its DM-only twin simulation ErisDark. At high speeds f(v) falls more steeply in Eris than in ErisDark or the SHM, easing the tension between recent results from the CDMS-II and XENON100 experiments. The non-Maxwellian aspects of f(v) are still present, but much less pronounced in Eris than in the DM-only runs. The weak dark disk increases the time-averaged scattering rate by only a few percent at low recoil energies. On the high velocity tail, however, the increase in typical speeds due to baryonic contraction results in strongly enhanced mean scattering rates compared to ErisDark, although they are still suppressed compared to the SHM. Similar trends are seen regarding the amplitude of the annual modulation, while the modulated fraction is increased compared to the SHM and decreased compared to ErisDark.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
astroparticle physics; dark matter; methods: numerical;
English
2014
784
2
161
none
Pillepich, A., Kuhlen, M., Guedes, J., Madau, P. (2014). The distribution of dark matter in the milky way's disk. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 784(2) [10.1088/0004-637x/784/2/161].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/452989
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