Tidal Debris posing as Dark Galaxies
Pierre-Alain Duc, Frederic Bournaud, Elias Brinks

TL;DR
This paper investigates tidal debris mistaken for dark galaxies, demonstrating through simulations that such features can mimic dark matter dominated objects without containing actual dark matter, and discusses methods to distinguish their origins.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of a specific candidate, VirgoHI21, showing it is likely tidal debris rather than a true dark galaxy, and offers criteria to identify tidal origins in similar objects.
Findings
VirgoHI21 is likely tidal debris from NGC 4254, not a dark galaxy.
Tidal debris can mimic dark matter signatures without containing dark matter.
Methods to differentiate tidal debris from genuine dark galaxies are discussed.
Abstract
Debris sent into the intergalactic medium during tidal collisions can tell us about several fundamental properties of galaxies, in particular their missing mass, both in the form of cosmological Dark Matter and so-called Lost Baryons. High velocity encounters, which are common in clusters of galaxies, are able to produce faint tidal debris that may appear as star-less, free floating HI clouds. These may be mistaken for Dark Galaxies, a putative class of gaseous, dark matter dominated, objects which for some reason never managed to form stars. VirgoHI21 is by far the most spectacular and most discussed Dark Galaxy candidate so far detected in HI surveys. We show here that it is most likely made out of material expelled 750 Myr ago from the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 4254 during its fly--by at about 1000 km/s by a massive intruder. Our numerical model of the collision is able to reproduce…
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