A Lower Bound on the Mass of Compact Objects from Dissipative Dark Matter
ORAL
Abstract
We study the fragmentation scale of dark gas formed in dissipative dark-matter halos and show that the simple atomic-dark-matter model consistent with all current observations can create low-mass fragments that can evolve into compact objects forbidden by stellar astrophysics. We model the collapse of the dark halo's dense core by tracing the thermochemical evolution of a uniform-density volume element under two extreme assumptions for density evolution: hydrostatic equilibrium and pressure-free collapse. We then compute the opacity-limited minimum fragment mass from the minimum temperature achieved in these calculations. The results indicate that much of the parameter space is highly unstable to small-scale fragmentation.
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Publication: Gurian et al, ApjL, 939, 1. <br>10.3847/2041-8213/ac997c<br>
Presenters
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James Gurian
Pennsylvania State University
Authors
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James Gurian
Pennsylvania State University
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Michael Ryan
Pennsylvania State University
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Sarah Schon
Pennsylvania State University
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Donghui Jeong
Pennsylvania State University
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Sarah E Shandera
Pennsylvania State University