Accurate masses for dispersion-supported galaxies
Joe Wolf, Gregory D. Martinez, James S. Bullock, Manoj Kaplinghat,, Marla Geha, Ricardo R. Munoz, Joshua D. Simon, Frank F. Avedo

TL;DR
This paper introduces a precise mass estimator for dispersion-supported stellar systems, validated across various galaxy types, revealing consistent dark matter halo masses and a U-shaped mass-to-light ratio trend.
Contribution
It derives a new, accurate mass estimator based on the spherical Jeans equation that works with minimal assumptions about velocity anisotropy.
Findings
All Milky Way dwarf spheroidals are consistent with a ~3 x 10^9 M_sun halo.
Faintest dwarf spheroidals have similar halo masses as brighter ones.
Mass-to-light ratios follow a U-shaped relation across galaxy types.
Abstract
We derive an accurate mass estimator for dispersion-supported stellar systems and demonstrate its validity by analyzing resolved line-of-sight velocity data for globular clusters, dwarf galaxies, and elliptical galaxies. Specifically, by manipulating the spherical Jeans equation we show that the dynamical mass enclosed within the 3D deprojected half-light radius r_1/2 can be determined with only mild assumptions about the spatial variation of the stellar velocity dispersion anisotropy. We find M_1/2 = 3 \sigma_los^2 r_1/2 / G ~ 4 \sigma_los^2 R_eff / G, where \sigma_los^2 is the luminosity-weighted square of the line-of-sight velocity dispersion and R_eff is the 2D projected half-light radius. While deceptively familiar in form, this formula is not the virial theorem, which cannot be used to determine accurate masses unless the radial profile of the total mass is known a priori. We…
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