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CCAPP Seminar: Moritz Fischer (University Observatory München)

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May 7, 2024
12:00PM - 1:00PM
PRB 4138 & Zoom

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Add to Calendar 2024-05-07 12:00:00 2024-05-07 13:00:00 CCAPP Seminar: Moritz Fischer (University Observatory München) Speaker: Moritz Fischer (University Observatory München)How could we probe the angular dependence of dark matter self-interactions?Self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) is promising to solve or at least mitigate small-scale problems of cold collisionless dark matter. N-body simulations have proven to be a powerful tool to study SIDM within the astrophysical context. However, it turned out to be difficult to simulate dark matter models that typically scatter about a small angle, for example, light mediator models. We developed a novel numerical scheme for this regime of frequent self-interactions that allows for N-body simulations of systems like galaxy cluster mergers or even cosmological simulations. We have studied various systems and found significant differences between the phenomenology of frequent self-interactions and the commonly studied large-angle scattering (rare self-interactions). For example, in mergers of galaxy clusters, frequent self-interactions can produce larger offsets between galaxies and dark matter than rare self-interactions. In addition, we find the abundance of satellites more suppressed for small-angle scattering in galaxy clusters. Generally speaking, we find the most significant differences in the phenomenology of systems far from equilibrium. Consequently, these are the best-suited systems to probe the angular dependence of SIDM.For Zoom information, please contact the seminar coordinators. PRB 4138 & Zoom Center for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics (CCAPP) ccapp@osu.edu America/New_York public

Speaker: Moritz Fischer (University Observatory München)

How could we probe the angular dependence of dark matter self-interactions?

Self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) is promising to solve or at least mitigate small-scale problems of cold collisionless dark matter. N-body simulations have proven to be a powerful tool to study SIDM within the astrophysical context. However, it turned out to be difficult to simulate dark matter models that typically scatter about a small angle, for example, light mediator models. We developed a novel numerical scheme for this regime of frequent self-interactions that allows for N-body simulations of systems like galaxy cluster mergers or even cosmological simulations. We have studied various systems and found significant differences between the phenomenology of frequent self-interactions and the commonly studied large-angle scattering (rare self-interactions). For example, in mergers of galaxy clusters, frequent self-interactions can produce larger offsets between galaxies and dark matter than rare self-interactions. In addition, we find the abundance of satellites more suppressed for small-angle scattering in galaxy clusters. Generally speaking, we find the most significant differences in the phenomenology of systems far from equilibrium. Consequently, these are the best-suited systems to probe the angular dependence of SIDM.

For Zoom information, please contact the seminar coordinators.

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