论文标题
巨大矮人星系中的cuspy暗物质密度曲线
Cuspy dark matter density profiles in massive dwarf galaxies
论文作者
论文摘要
星系的旋转曲线探测其总质量分布,包括暗物质。矮星系是研究暗物质密度分布的出色系统,因为与较高的质量系统相比,它们往往具有更大的暗物质分数。 Core-Cusp问题描述了在观测到矮星系(较浅的核心)和仅暗物质模拟的星系中心($β^*$)中的暗物质密度分布($β^*$)中发现的差异。我们研究了$β^*$在附近的六个螺旋矮星系中,该星系为高分辨率CO $ j = 1-0 $数据获得了Alma的数据。我们使用CO旋转曲线作为总电位的示踪剂,并分解旋转曲线并分解暗物质的质量曲线,并分解4.5 $ $ $ m的光度法以定义恒星质量分布。我们发现$ \langleβ^*\ rangle = 0.6 $,在该样品中的星系中的标准偏差为$ \ pm0.1 $,与此质量范围内的先前测量值一致。所研究的星系在矮星系的高恒星质量端,并且具有与较低的质量矮人相比,与其他观察结果一致。当使用相同的坡度定义时,我们观察到比火和尼霍模拟所预测的陡峭斜率。这可能表明,这些相对较大的矮人比这些模拟所预测的相对较大的气体流向其中心,这些模拟过度预测了积聚或反馈事件的频率,或者这些效果的组合在起作用。
Rotation curves of galaxies probe their total mass distributions, including dark matter. Dwarf galaxies are excellent systems to investigate the dark matter density distribution, as they tend to have larger fractions of dark matter compared to higher mass systems. The core-cusp problem describes the discrepancy found in the slope of the dark matter density profile in the centres of galaxies ($β^*$) between observations of dwarf galaxies (shallower cores) and dark matter-only simulations (steeper cusps). We investigate $β^*$ in six nearby spiral dwarf galaxies for which high-resolution CO $J=1-0$ data were obtained with ALMA. We derive rotation curves and decompose the mass profile of the dark matter using our CO rotation curves as a tracer of the total potential and 4.5$μ$m photometry to define the stellar mass distribution. We find $\langleβ^*\rangle = 0.6$ with a standard deviation of $\pm0.1$ among the galaxies in this sample, in agreement with previous measurements in this mass range. The galaxies studied are on the high stellar mass end of dwarf galaxies and have cuspier profiles than lower mass dwarfs, in agreement with other observations. When the same definition of the slope is used, we observe steeper slopes than predicted by the FIRE and NIHAO simulations. This may signal that these relatively massive dwarfs underwent stronger gas inflows toward their centres than predicted by these simulations, that these simulations over-predict the frequency of accretion or feedback events, or that a combination of these or other effects are at work.