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Resolving the outer density profile of dark matter halo in Andromeda galaxy

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 Added by Takanobu Kirihara
 Publication date 2013
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Large-scale faint structure detected by the recent observations in the halo of the Andromeda galaxy (M31) provides an attractive window to explore the structure of outer cold dark matter (CDM) halo in M31. Using an N-body simulation of the interaction between an accreting satellite galaxy and M31, we investigate the mass density profile of the CDM halo. We find the sufficient condition of the outer density profile of CDM halo in M31 to reproduce the Andromeda giant stream and the shells at the east and west sides of M31. The result indicates that the density profile of the outer dark matter halo of M31 is a steeper than the prediction of the theory of the structure formation based on the CDM model.



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The cold dark matter (CDM) cosmology, which is the standard theory of the structure formation in the universe, predicts that the outer density profile of dark matter halos decreases with the cube of distance from the center. However, so far not much effort has examined this hypothesis. In the halo of the Andromeda galaxy (M31), large-scale stellar structures detected by the recent observations provide a potentially suitable window to investigate the mass--density distribution of the dark matter halo. We explore the density structure of the dark matter halo in M31 using an N-body simulation of the interaction between an accreting satellite galaxy and M31. To reproduce the Andromeda Giant Southern Stream and the stellar shells at the east and west sides of M31, we find the sufficient condition for the power-law index $alpha$ of the outer density distribution of the dark matter halo. The best-fit parameter is $alpha=-3.7$, which is steeper than the CDM prediction.
Andromeda XXI (And XXI) has been proposed as a dwarf spheroidal galaxy with a central dark matter density that is lower than expected in the Standard $Lambda$ Cold Dark Matter ($Lambda$CDM) cosmology. In this work, we present dynamical observations for 77 member stars in this system, more than doubling previous studies to determine whether this galaxy is truly a low density outlier. We measure a systemic velocity of $v_r=-363.4pm1.0,{rm kms}^{-1}$ and a velocity dispersion of $sigma_v=6.1^{+1.0}_{-0.9},{rm kms}^{-1}$, consistent with previous work and within $1sigma$ of predictions made within the modified Newtonian dynamics framework. We also measure the metallicity of our member stars from their spectra, finding a mean value of ${rm [Fe/H]}=-1.7pm0.1$~dex. We model the dark matter density profile of And~XXI using an improved version of GravSphere, finding a central density of $rho_{rm DM}({rm 150 pc})=2.7_{-1.7}^{+2.7} times 10^7 ,{rm M_odot,kpc^{-3}}$ at 68% confidence, and a density at two half light radii of $rho_{rm DM}({rm 1.75 kpc})=0.9_{-0.2}^{+0.3} times 10^5 ,{rm M_odot,kpc^{-3}}$ at 68% confidence. These are both a factor ${sim}3-5$ lower than the densities expected from abundance matching in $Lambda$CDM. We show that this cannot be explained by `dark matter heating since And~XXI had too little star formation to significantly lower its inner dark matter density, while dark matter heating only acts on the profile inside the half light radius. However, And~XXIs low density can be accommodated within $Lambda$CDM if it experienced extreme tidal stripping (losing $>95%$ of its mass), or if it inhabits a low concentration halo on a plunging orbit that experienced repeated tidal shocks.
Aims. We use stellar line-of-sight velocities to constrain the dark matter-density profile of Eridanus 2, an ultra-faint dwarf galaxy ($M_mathrm{V} = -7.1$, $M_* approx 9 times 10^4,M_odot$). We furthermore derive constraints on fundamental properties of self-interacting and fuzzy dark matter scenarios. Methods. We present new observations of Eridanus 2 from MUSE-Faint, a survey of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies with MUSE on the Very Large Telescope, and determine line-of-sight velocities for stars inside the half-light radius. Combined with literature data, we have 92 stellar tracers out to twice the half-light radius. We constrain models of cold dark matter, self-interacting dark matter, and fuzzy dark matter with these tracers, using CJAM and pyGravSphere for the dynamical analysis. Results. We find substantial evidence for cold dark matter over self-interacting dark matter and weak evidence for fuzzy dark matter over cold dark matter. We find a virial mass $M_{200} sim 10^8,M_odot$ and astrophysical factors $J(alpha_mathrm{c}^J) sim 10^{11},M_odot^2,mathrm{kpc}^{-5}$ and $D(alpha_mathrm{c}^D) sim 10^2$-$10^{2.5},M_odot,mathrm{kpc}^{-2}$. We do not resolve a core ($r_mathrm{c} < 47,mathrm{pc}$, 68-% level) or soliton ($r_mathrm{sol} < 7.2,mathrm{pc}$, 68-% level). These limits are equivalent to an effective self-interaction coefficient $fGamma < 2.2 times 10^{-29},mathrm{cm}^3,mathrm{s}^{-1},mathrm{eV}^{-1},c^2$ and a fuzzy-dark-matter particle mass $m_mathrm{a} > 4.0 times 10^{-20},mathrm{eV},c^{-2}$. The constraint on self-interaction is complementary to those from gamma-ray searches. The constraint on fuzzy-dark-matter particle mass is inconsistent with those obtained for larger dwarf galaxies, suggesting that the flattened density profiles of those galaxies are not caused by fuzzy dark matter. (Abridged)
We present an analysis of the large-scale structure of the halo of the Andromeda galaxy, based on the Pan-Andromeda Archeological Survey (PAndAS), currently the most complete map of resolved stellar populations in any galactic halo. Despite copious substructure, the global halo populations follow closely power law profiles that become steeper with increasing metallicity. We divide the sample into stream-like populations and a smooth halo component. Fitting a three-dimensional halo model reveals that the most metal-poor populations ([Fe/H]<-1.7) are distributed approximately spherically (slightly prolate with ellipticity c/a=1.09+/-0.03), with only a relatively small fraction (42%) residing in discernible stream-like structures. The sphericity of the ancient smooth component strongly hints that the dark matter halo is also approximately spherical. More metal-rich populations contain higher fractions of stars in streams (86% for [Fe/H]>-0.6). The space density of the smooth metal-poor component has a global power-law slope of -3.08+/-0.07, and a non-parametric fit shows that the slope remains nearly constant from 30kpc to 300kpc. The total stellar mass in the halo at distances beyond 2 degrees is 1.1x10^10 Solar masses, while that of the smooth component is 3x10^9 Solar masses. Extrapolating into the inner galaxy, the total stellar mass of the smooth halo is plausibly 8x10^9 Solar masses. We detect a substantial metallicity gradient, which declines from [Fe/H]=-0.7 at R=30kpc to [Fe/H]=-1.5 at R=150kpc for the full sample, with the smooth halo being 0.2dex more metal poor than the full sample at each radius. While qualitatively in-line with expectations from cosmological simulations, these observations are of great importance as they provide a prototype template that such simulations must now be able to reproduce in quantitative detail.
88 - Fangzhou Jiang 2018
The similarity between the distributions of spins for galaxies ($lambda_{rm g}$) and for dark-matter haloes ($lambda_{rm h}$), indicated both by simulations and observations, is naively interpreted as a one-to-one correlation between the spins of a galaxy and its host halo. This is used to predict galaxy sizes in semi-analytic models via $R_{rm e}simeqlambda_{rm h} R_{rm v}$, with $R_{rm e}$ the half-mass radius of the galaxy and $R_{rm v}$ the halo radius. Utilizing two different suites of zoom-in cosmological simulations, we find that $lambda_{rm g}$ and $lambda_{rm h}$ are in fact only barely correlated, especially at $zgeq 1$. A general smearing of this correlation is expected based on the different spin histories, where the more recently accreted baryons through streams gain and then lose significant angular momentum compared to the gradually accumulated dark matter. Expecting the spins of baryons and dark matter to be correlated at accretion into $R_{rm v}$, the null correlation at the end reflects an anti-correlation between $lambda_{rm g}/lambda_{rm h}$ and $lambda_{rm h}$, which can partly arise from mergers and a compact star-forming phase that many galaxies undergo. On the other hand, the halo and galaxy spin vectors tend to be aligned, with a median $costheta=0.6$-0.7 between galaxy and halo, consistent with instreaming within a preferred plane. The galaxy spin is better correlated with the spin of the inner halo, but this largely reflects the effect of the baryons on the halo. Following the null spin correlation, $lambda_{rm h}$ is not a useful proxy for $R_{rm e}$. While our simulations reproduce a general relation of the sort $R_{rm e}=AR_{rm vir}$, in agreement with observational estimates, the relation becomes tighter with $A=0.02(c/10)^{-0.7}$, where $c$ is the halo concentration, which in turn introduces a dependence on mass and redshift.
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