High-Resolution Rotation Curves and Galaxy Mass Models from THINGS
W.J.G. de Blok (1), F. Walter (2), E. Brinks (3), C. Trachternach (4),, S-H. Oh (5), R.C. Kennicutt Jr. (6) ((1) University of Cape Town; (2) MPIfA,, Heidelberg; (3) University of Hertfordshire; (4) Ruhr-University Bochum; (5), RSAA, Mt Stromlo; (6) University of Cambridge)

TL;DR
This study presents high-quality HI rotation curves for 19 nearby galaxies, enabling detailed mass modeling and comparison with dark matter theories, revealing preference for core-like halos in low-mass galaxies.
Contribution
Provides the highest resolution HI rotation curves for a large galaxy sample, enabling improved mass models and testing of dark matter halo profiles.
Findings
Mass models agree with photometric disk masses.
Core-dominated halos preferred in low-mass galaxies.
Dark matter densities are lower than CDM predictions.
Abstract
We present rotation curves of 19 galaxies from THINGS, The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey. The high spatial and velocity resolution of THINGS make these the highest quality HI rotation curves available to date for a large sample of nearby galaxies, spanning a wide range of HI masses and luminosities. The high quality of the data allows us to derive the geometrical and dynamical parameters using HI data alone. We do not find any declining rotation curves unambiguously associated with a cut-off in the mass distribution out to the last measured point. The rotation curves are combined with 3.6 um data from SINGS (Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey) to construct mass models. Our best-fit, dynamical disk masses, derived from the rotation curves, are in good agreement with photometric disk masses derived from the 3.6 um images in combination with stellar population synthesis arguments and two…
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