The nature of the dark matter in the Halo of our Galaxy remains a mystery. Arguments are presented that the dark matter does not consist of ordinary stellar or substellar objects, i.e., the dark matter is not made of faint stars, brown dwarfs, white dwarfs, or neutron stars. In fact, faint stars and brown dwarfs constitute no more than a few percent of the mass of our Galaxy, and stellar remnants must satisfy $\Omega_{WD} \leq 3 \times 10^{-3} h^{-1}$, where $h$ is the Hubble constant in units of 100 km/s Mpc^{-1}. On theoretical grounds one is then pushed to more exotic explanations. Indeed a nonbaryonic component in the Halo seems to be required
Several arguments are presented indicating that the apparently non-luminous matter forming massive h...
We discuss the recent discovery by Oppenheimer et al (2001) of old, cool white dwarf stars, which ma...
We examine the chemical abundance constraints on a population of white dwarfs in the Halo of our Gal...
Several lines of evidence suggest that some of the dark matter may be non-baryonic: the non-detectio...
The general arguments for baryonic and galactic dark matter are presented. Limits coming from a vari...
The nature of the dark matter in the halo of our Galaxy is still largely unknown. The microlensing e...
Cosmological nucleosynthesis calculations imply that many of the baryons in the Universe must be dar...
Observations in the optical, in X-rays, and gravitational lensing of galaxies, clusters of galaxies,...
The detection of stars in the process of being tidally removed from globular clusters and dwarf sphe...
We argue that observations on Milky Way and dwarf spheroidals imply existence of individual haloes a...
accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics (19-05-2004)International audienceHaving ruled out the possib...
The possibility that galactic halos are composed of stellar remnants such as neutron stars and white...
We derive mass functions for halo red dwarfs (stars just massive enough to burn hydrogen) with varyi...
Microlensing results suggest that a good fraction of the halo is composed of massive chunks (0.1-1 $...
We argue that any violent galactic winds following early epoch of star bursts would significantly we...
Several arguments are presented indicating that the apparently non-luminous matter forming massive h...
We discuss the recent discovery by Oppenheimer et al (2001) of old, cool white dwarf stars, which ma...
We examine the chemical abundance constraints on a population of white dwarfs in the Halo of our Gal...
Several lines of evidence suggest that some of the dark matter may be non-baryonic: the non-detectio...
The general arguments for baryonic and galactic dark matter are presented. Limits coming from a vari...
The nature of the dark matter in the halo of our Galaxy is still largely unknown. The microlensing e...
Cosmological nucleosynthesis calculations imply that many of the baryons in the Universe must be dar...
Observations in the optical, in X-rays, and gravitational lensing of galaxies, clusters of galaxies,...
The detection of stars in the process of being tidally removed from globular clusters and dwarf sphe...
We argue that observations on Milky Way and dwarf spheroidals imply existence of individual haloes a...
accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics (19-05-2004)International audienceHaving ruled out the possib...
The possibility that galactic halos are composed of stellar remnants such as neutron stars and white...
We derive mass functions for halo red dwarfs (stars just massive enough to burn hydrogen) with varyi...
Microlensing results suggest that a good fraction of the halo is composed of massive chunks (0.1-1 $...
We argue that any violent galactic winds following early epoch of star bursts would significantly we...
Several arguments are presented indicating that the apparently non-luminous matter forming massive h...
We discuss the recent discovery by Oppenheimer et al (2001) of old, cool white dwarf stars, which ma...
We examine the chemical abundance constraints on a population of white dwarfs in the Halo of our Gal...