Self-consistent nonspherical isothermal halos embedding zero-thickness disks
N. C. Amorisco, G. Bertin

TL;DR
This paper develops self-consistent models of nonspherical isothermal galaxy halos embedding zero-thickness disks, revealing a strong empirical correlation between halo and disk parameters and reducing the disk-halo degeneracy in rotation curve decompositions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel self-consistent modeling approach for nonspherical halos with Maxwellian distribution functions, linking halo and disk properties and improving rotation curve fits.
Findings
Discovery of a fine-tuning relation between halo and disk scale lengths.
Self-consistent models produce flat rotation curves across various mass ratios.
Models reduce the disk-halo degeneracy in rotation curve analysis.
Abstract
Disk-halo decompositions of galaxy rotation curves are generally performed in a parametric way. We construct self-consistent models of nonspherical isothermal halos embedding a zero-thickness disk, by assuming that the halo distribution function is a Maxwellian. The method developed here can be used to study other physically-based choices for the halo distribution function and the case of a disk accompanied by a bulge. In a preliminary investigation we note the existence of a fine tuning between the scalelengths R_{\Omega} and h, respectively characterizing the rise of the rotation curve and the luminosity profile of the disk, which surprisingly applies to both high surface brightness and low surface brightness galaxies. This empirical correlation identifies a much stronger conspiracy than the one required by the smoothness and flatness of the rotation curve (disk-halo conspiracy). The…
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.
