Quintessential halos around galaxies

Alexandre Arbey, Julien Lesgourgues, and Pierre Salati
Phys. Rev. D 64, 123528 – Published 28 November 2001
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Abstract

The nature of the dark matter that binds galaxies remains an open question. The favored candidate has so far been the neutralino. This massive species with evanescent interactions is now in difficulty. It would actually collapse in dense clumps and would therefore play havoc with the matter it is supposed to shepherd. We focus here on a massive and noninteracting complex scalar field as an alternate option to the astronomical missing mass. We investigate the classical solutions that describe the Bose condensate of such a field in gravitational interaction with matter. This simplistic model accounts quite well for the dark matter inside low-luminosity spirals whereas the agreement lessens for the brightest objects where baryons dominate. A scalar mass m0.4 to 1.6×1023 eV is derived when both high and low-luminosity spirals are fitted at the same time. Comparison with astronomical observations is made quantitative through a chi-squared analysis. We conclude that scalar fields offer a promising direction worth being explored.

  • Received 5 June 2001

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.64.123528

©2001 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Alexandre Arbey1,2,*, Julien Lesgourgues1,†, and Pierre Salati1,2,‡

  • 1Laboratoire de Physique Théorique LAPTH, Boîte Postale 110, F-74941 Annecy-le-Vieux Cedex, France
  • 2Université de Savoie, Boîte Postale 1104, F-73011 Chambéry Cedex, France

  • *Email address: arbey@lapp.in2p3.fr
  • Email address: lesgourg@lapp.in2p3.fr
  • Email address: salati@lapp.in2p3.fr

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Issue

Vol. 64, Iss. 12 — 15 December 2001

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