The Kinematic Connection Between Galaxies and Dark Matter Haloes
Aaron A. Dutton (Victoria), Charlie Conroy (Princeton), Frank C. van, den Bosch (Utah), Francisco Prada (IAA-CSIC), Surhud More (Chicago)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relationship between galaxy velocities and dark matter haloes, revealing differences between galaxy types and implications for black hole-halo relations, challenging current simulations.
Contribution
It provides new empirical relations between optical and virial velocities for different galaxy types and discusses their implications for galaxy formation models.
Findings
Late-type galaxies have V_opt approximately equal to V_200.
Early-type galaxies show V_opt not equal to V_200, especially at low and high masses.
Current simulations fail to reproduce observed velocity relations.
Abstract
Using estimates of dark halo masses from satellite kinematics, weak gravitational lensing, and halo abundance matching, combined with the Tully-Fisher and Faber-Jackson relations, we derive the mean relation between the optical, V_opt, and virial, V_200, circular velocities of early- and late-type galaxies at redshift z~0. For late-type galaxies V_opt ~ V_200 over the velocity range V_opt=90-260 km/s, and is consistent with V_opt = V_maxh (the maximum circular velocity of NFW dark matter haloes in the concordance LCDM cosmology). However, for early-type galaxies V_opt \ne V_200, with the exception of early-type galaxies with V_opt simeq 350 km/s. This is inconsistent with early-type galaxies being, in general, globally isothermal. For low mass (V_opt < 250 km/s) early-types V_opt > V_maxh, indicating that baryons have modified the potential well, while high mass (V_opt > 400 km/s)…
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