Die Natur der dunklen Materie und Strukturbildung
View on FWF Research RadarKeywords
Research Disciplines
The nature of the dark matter (DM) in the Universe remains one of the most profound open problems in cosmology and physics. While astronomical observations have determined the present cosmic energy density in DM with high precision, its particle nature is still unknown. Among the most prominent DM candidates are weakly-interacting massive particles from extensions to the standard model of particle physics, which give rise to what has become the standard collisionless cold dark matter (CDM) model. While the CDM model has proven successful on large cosmic scales, its predictions on smaller galactic scales have been continuously challenged by observations: CDM predicts an overabundance of satellite galaxies around galaxies of Milky- Way size, in contrast to what is observed in our Local Group of galaxies and beyond. CDM simulations predict a universal density run for the DM in and around galaxies, which has a central cusp. In contrast, DM- dominated galaxies have been observed to have almost constant central densities out to around 1 kpc. Also, a common dynamical mass scale of dwarf galaxies around our Milky Way has been identified, despite a difference in their luminosities of up to four orders of magnitude. All this evidence points to a new characteristic scale for DM clustering, which is in contradiction with collisionless CDM models. Various alternatives for the DM to solve these problems have thus been suggested. This project aims to study and analyze structure formation of one of these alternatives, namely scalar-field dark matter (SFDM). SFDM is made up of ultralight bosons, which have condensed into their ground state early in the evolution of the Universe. SFDM arises also in extensions to the particle standard model. The QCD axion is the best known example, and has been one of the most favoured DM candidates ever since its inception. Promising SFDM candidates to solve the above problems have much smaller masses than the QCD axion, for then the scale below which DM clustering is prohibited can be in accordance with observations. In this project, we plan to carry out for the first time a coherent and complete analysis of the growth of linear and nonlinear perturbations, thus the growth of structure in a universe with SFDM throughout its entire evolution. We will pursue analytic calculations as well as numerical simulations, to compare with data in order to determine whether SFDM can reproduce observations of galactic and cosmological scales self-consistently, and whether it could indeed account for the DM in the Universe.
This project has no linked research outputs in the database.
No additional funding sources recorded.
Research Fields