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The observed Lyman-$alpha$ flux power spectrum (FPS) is suppressed on scales below $sim~ 30~{rm km~s}^{-1}$. This cutoff could be due to the high temperature, $T_0$, and pressure, $p_0$, of the absorbing gas or, alternatively, it could reflect the free streaming of dark matter particles in the early universe. We perform a set of very high resolution cosmological hydrodynamic simulations in which we vary $T_0$, $p_0$ and the amplitude of the dark matter free streaming, and compare the FPS of mock spectra to the data. We show that the location of the dark matter free-streaming cutoff scales differently with redshift than the cutoff produced by thermal effects and is more pronounced at higher redshift. We, therefore, focus on a comparison to the observed FPS at $z>5$. We demonstrate that the FPS cutoff can be fit assuming cold dark matter, but it can be equally well fit assuming that the dark matter consists of $sim 7$ keV sterile neutrinos in which case the cutoff is due primarily to the dark matter free streaming.
The renewed interest in the possibility that primordial black holes (PBHs) may constitute a significant part of the dark matter has motivated revisiting old observational constraints, as well as developing new ones. We present new limits on the PBH a
With recent Lyman-alpha forest data from BOSS and XQ-100, some studies suggested that the lower mass limit on the fuzzy dark matter (FDM) particles is lifted up to $10^{-21},mathrm{eV}$. However, such a limit was obtained by $Lambda$CDM simulations w
The Lyman-$alpha$ forest is a valuable probe of dark matter models featuring a scale-dependent suppression of the power spectrum as compared to $Lambda$CDM. In this work, we present a new estimator of the Lyman-$alpha$ flux power spectrum that does n
Using cosmological particle hydrodynamical simulations and uniform ultraviolet backgrounds, we compare Lyman-$alpha$ forest flux spectra predicted by the conventional cold dark matter (CDM) model, the free-particle wave dark matter (FP$psi$DM) model
The Lyman-$alpha$ forest is a powerful tool to constrain warm dark matter models (WDM). Its main observable -- flux power spectrum -- should exhibit a suppression at small scales in WDM models. This suppression, however, can be mimicked by a number o