Impact of baryon physics on dark matter structures: a detailed simulation study of halo density profiles
Alan R. Duffy, Joop Schaye, Scott T. Kay, Claudio Dalla Vecchia,, Richard A. Battye, C. M. Booth

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to examine how baryonic physics influence dark matter halo density profiles, revealing that feedback processes significantly alter halo concentration and inner density slopes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of baryonic effects on dark matter structures across different scales, emphasizing the role of feedback in shaping halo profiles.
Findings
Baryons increase halo concentration by up to 30% in galaxies.
Weak feedback leads to isothermal inner profiles consistent with observations.
AGN feedback reduces baryon fractions and results in shallower density profiles.
Abstract
The back-reaction of baryons on the dark matter halo density profile is of great interest, not least because it is an important systematic uncertainty when attempting to detect the dark matter. Here, we draw on a large suite of high resolution cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, to systematically investigate this process and its dependence on the baryonic physics associated with galaxy formation. The inclusion of baryons results in significantly more concentrated density profiles if radiative cooling is efficient and feedback is weak. The dark matter halo concentration can in that case increase by as much as 30 (10) per cent on galaxy (cluster) scales. The most significant effects occur in galaxies at high redshift, where there is a strong anti-correlation between the baryon fraction in the halo centre and the inner slope of both the total and the dark matter density profiles. If…
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