A possible challenge for cold and warm dark matter
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Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Research
Abstract
Measuring the density profile and mass concentration of dark-matter haloes is a key test of the standard cold dark matter paradigm. Such objects are dark and thus challenging to characterize, but they can be studied via gravitational lensing. Recently, a million-solar-mass object was discovered superposed on an extended and extremely thin gravitational arc. Here we report on extensive tests of various assumptions for the mass density profile and redshift of this object. We find that models that best describe the data have two components: an unresolved point mass of radius ≤10 pc centred on an extended mass distribution with an almost constant surface density out to a truncation radius of 139 pc. These properties do not resemble any known astronomical object. However, if the object is dark matter dominated, its structure is incompatible with cold dark matter models but may be compatible with a self-interacting dark-matter halo where the central region has collapsed to form a black hole. This detection could thus carry substantial implications for our current understanding of dark matter.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY : The dataset is publicly available via the EVN archive at https://archive.jive.nl/scripts/portal.php (observation ID GM068, principal investigator McKean).
CODE AVAILABILITY : The modelling code PRONTO is not publicly available. The reader interested in using this code can contact svegetti@mpa-garching.mpg.de. The methodology used for the lens modelling is fully explained by Powell et al.
Keywords
Cosmology, Dark energy, Dark matter
Sustainable Development Goals
None
Citation
Vegetti, S., White, S.D.M., McKean, J.P. et al. A possible challenge for cold and warm dark matter. Nature Astronomy (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-025-02746-w.
