MikeeMiracle said:
Summary:: Could there potentially be Dark Matter stars and Dark Matter planets within our galaxy?
Do we understand Dark Matter enough to know how it is concentrated within a galaxy. For example, would it be evenly distributed like hydrogen would be or could it be concentrated like most matter is? For example could there potentially be Dark Matter stars and Dark Matter planets within our galaxy?
To form the type of structures you mention requires an interaction between the matter involved beyond just gravity. The matter has to interact via electromagnetism. This allow the particles to "collide" stick together, and also provides a means of ridding itself of energy.
So when two Visible matter particles meet, it is their electromagnetic fields that are interacting, they determine whether the particles stick together, or bounce off each other. Remove this interaction and the particles would pass right through each other like they weren't even there.
With dark matter, even when it meets up with visible matter, it has no "handle" with which to interact.
A dark matter particle falling towards the Earth, would pick up speed as it fell, pass right through the Earth as if there had been a hole drilled through it, and then climb away on the other side. If it didn't pass right through the center of the Earth it would have its path deflected by gravity, it just wouldn't lose any speed.
That is not to say that dark matter avoids all clumping all together. The various gravitational interactions between dark matter and visible matter can and does cause dark matter form large loose structures like the galactic halos, Dark matter is also expected to be slightly denser near the center of galaxies. But without the electromagnetic interaction to speed things up, this is an extremely slow process, And dark matter simply has not had time to condense more.