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We analyze the cold dark matter density profiles of 54 galaxy halos simulated with FIRE-2 galaxy formation physics, each resolved within $0.5%$ of the halo virial radius. These halos contain galaxies with masses that range from ultra-faint dwarfs ($M_star simeq 10^{4.5} M_{odot}$) to the largest spirals ($M_star simeq 10^{11} M_{odot}$) and have density profiles that are both cored and cuspy. We characterize our results using a new analytic density profile that extends the standard Einasto form to allow for a pronounced constant-density core in the resolved innermost radius. With one additional core-radius parameter, $r_{c}$, this core-Einasto profile is able to characterize the shape and normalization of our feedback-impacted dark matter halos. In order to enable comparisons with observations, we provide fitting functions for $r_{c}$ and other profile parameters as a function of both $M_star$ and $M_{star}/M_{rm halo}$. In agreement with similar studies done in the literature, we find that dark matter core formation is most efficient at the characteristic stellar-mass to halo-mass ratio $M_star/M_{rm halo} simeq 5 times 10^{-3}$, or $M_{star} sim 10^9 , M_{odot}$, with cores that are roughly the size of the galaxy half-light radius, $r_{c} simeq 1-5$ kpc. Furthermore, we find no evidence for core formation at radii $gtrsim 100 rm pc$ in galaxies with $M_{star}/M_{rm halo} < 5times 10^{-4}$ or $M_star lesssim 10^6 , M_{odot}$. For Milky Way-size galaxies, baryonic contraction often makes halos significantly more concentrated and dense at the stellar half-light radius than dark matter only runs. However, even at the Milky Way scale, FIRE-2 galaxy formation still produces small dark matter cores of $simeq 0.5-2$ kpc in size. Recent evidence for a ${sim} 2$ kpc core in the Milky Ways dark matter halo is consistent with this expectation.
We construct merger trees from the largest database of dark matter haloes to date provided by the Millennium simulation to quantify the merger rates of haloes over a broad range of descendant halo mass (1e12 < M0 < 1e15 Msun), progenitor mass ratio (
Recent cosmological hydrodynamical simulations suggest that baryonic processes, and in particular supernova feedback after bursts of star formation, can alter the structure of dark matter haloes and transform primordial cusps into shallower cores. To
Using a suite of three large cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, Horizon-AGN, Horizon-noAGN (no AGN feedback) and Horizon-DM (no baryons), we investigate how a typical sub-grid model for AGN feedback affects the evolution of the inner density pr
Comparison of observed satellite galaxies of the Milky Way (hereafter MW) with dark matter subhaloes in cosmological $N$-body simulations of MW-mass haloes suggest that such subhaloes, if they exist, are occupied by satellites in a stochastic fashion
Surveying dark matter deficient galaxies (those with dark matter mass to stellar mass ratio $M_{rm dm}/M_{rm star}<1$) in the Illustris simulation of structure formation in the flat-$Lambda$CDM cosmogony, we find $M_{rm star} approx 2 times 10^8, M_s