The rotation curves shapes of late-type dwarf galaxies
R.A. Swaters, R. Sancisi, T.S. van Albada, J.M. van der Hulst

TL;DR
This study analyzes the rotation curves of 62 late-type dwarf galaxies, revealing their similarity to spiral galaxies in shape and suggesting that luminous mass dominates their central gravitational potential.
Contribution
It provides detailed rotation curve shapes for dwarf galaxies, correcting for beam smearing, and compares these with spiral galaxies to understand mass distribution and rotation curve extent.
Findings
Dwarf galaxy rotation curves rise steeply and flatten within two disk scale lengths.
Outer rotation curve slopes are similar between dwarf and spiral galaxies.
Central light concentration correlates with higher central mass density.
Abstract
We present rotation curves derived for a sample of 62 late-type dwarf galaxies that have been observed as part of the Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular Galaxies (WHISP) project. The rotation curves were derived by interactively fitting model data cubes to the observed cubes, taking rotation curve shape, HI distribution, inclination, and the size of the beam into account. This makes it possible to correct for the effects of beam smearing. The dwarf galaxies in our sample have rotation-curve shapes that are similar to those of late-type spiral galaxies, in the sense that their rotation curves, when expressed in units of disk scale lengths, rise as steeply in the inner parts and start to flatten at two disk scale lengths. None of the galaxies in our sample have solid-body rotation curves that extend beyond three scale lengths. The logarithmic outer rotation curve slopes are…
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