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Published July 2011 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Central Slope of Dark Matter Cores in Dwarf Galaxies: Simulations versus THINGS

Abstract

We make a direct comparison of the derived dark matter (DM) distributions between hydrodynamical simulations of dwarf galaxies assuming a ΛCDM cosmology and the observed dwarf galaxies sample from the THINGS survey in terms of (1) the rotation curve shape and (2) the logarithmic inner density slope α of mass density profiles. The simulations, which include the effect of baryonic feedback processes, such as gas cooling, star formation, cosmic UV background heating, and most importantly, physically motivated gas outflows driven by supernovae, form bulgeless galaxies with DM cores. We show that the stellar and baryonic mass is similar to that inferred from photometric and kinematic methods for galaxies of similar circular velocity. Analyzing the simulations in exactly the same way as the observational sample allows us to address directly the so-called cusp/core problem in the ΛCDM model. We show that the rotation curves of the simulated dwarf galaxies rise less steeply than cold dark matter rotation curves and are consistent with those of the THINGS dwarf galaxies. The mean value of the logarithmic inner density slopes α of the simulated galaxies' DM density profiles is ~–0.4 ± 0.1, which shows good agreement with α = –0.29 ± 0.07 of the THINGS dwarf galaxies. The effect of non-circular motions is not significant enough to affect the results. This confirms that the baryonic feedback processes included in the simulations are efficiently able to make the initial cusps with α ~–1.0 to –1.5 predicted by DM-only simulations shallower and induce DM halos with a central mass distribution similar to that observed in nearby dwarf galaxies.

Additional Information

© 2011 American Astronomical Society. Received 2010 November 5; accepted 2011 March 30; published 2011 June 9. S.-H.O. acknowledges financial support from the South African Square Kilometre Array Project. F.G. acknowledges support from HST GO-1125, NSF ITR grant PHY-0205413 (also supporting TQ), NSF grant AST-0607819 and NASA ATP NNX08AG84G. The work ofW.J.G.d.B. is based upon research supported by the South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Technology and National Research Foundation. We thank the computer resources and technical support by TERAGRID, ARSC, NAS, and the UW computing center, where the simulations were run.

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