Galaxy-Induced Transformation of Dark Matter Halos
Mario G. Abadi, Julio F. Navarro, Mark Fardal, Arif Babul, Matthias, Steinmetz

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that galaxy assembly makes dark matter halos more oblate and less contracted than previously thought, challenging existing models of halo response.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy assembly alters halo shape and contraction, emphasizing the importance of baryonic deposition mode and assembly history in halo evolution.
Findings
Halos become more oblate and axisymmetric due to galaxy assembly.
Halo contraction is less than predicted by adiabatic contraction models.
The mode of baryonic mass deposition influences halo response.
Abstract
We use N-body/gasdynamical LambdaCDM cosmological simulations to examine the effect of the assembly of a central galaxy on the shape and mass profile of its dark halo. Two series of simulations are compared; one that follows only the evolution of the dark matter component and a second one where a baryonic component is added. These simulations include radiative cooling but neglect star formation and feedback, leading most baryons to collect at the halo center in a disk which is too small and too massive when compared with typical spiral. This unrealistic model allows us, nevertheless, to gauge the maximum effect that galaxies may have in transforming their dark halos. We find that the shape of the halo becomes more axisymmetric: halos are transformed from triaxial into essentially oblate systems, with well-aligned isopotential contours of roughly constant flattening (c/a ~ 0.85). Halos…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
