Dark matter response to galaxy formation
Patricia B. Tissera (1,2), Simon D. M. White (3), Susana Pedrosa (1,2), and Cecilia Scannapieco (4) ((1) Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones, Cientificas y Tecnicas, CONICET, Argentina (2) Instituto de Astronomia y, Fisica del Espacio

TL;DR
This study uses detailed simulations to explore how galaxy formation processes influence the structure and dynamics of dark matter haloes, revealing complex responses dependent on assembly history and baryonic physics.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the impact of baryonic processes on dark matter halo structure and challenges existing adiabatic contraction models.
Findings
Dark matter density profiles vary significantly with baryon inclusion.
Velocity dispersion decreases monotonically with radius in all haloes.
Shape and concentration are influenced by formation history and baryonic effects.
Abstract
We have resimulated the six galaxy-sized haloes of the Aquarius Project including metal-dependent cooling, star formation and supernova feedback. This allows us to study not only how dark matter haloes respond to galaxy formation, but also how this response is affected by details of halo assembly history. In agreement with previous work, we find baryon condensation to lead to increased dark matter concentration. Dark matter density profiles differ substantially in shape from halo to halo when baryons are included, but in all cases the velocity dispersion decreases monotonically with radius. Some haloes show an approximately constant dark matter velocity anisotropy with , while others retain the anisotropy structure of their baryon-free versions. Most of our haloes become approximately oblate in their inner regions, although a few retain the shape of their…
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