From Galaxy Clusters to Ultra-Faint Dwarf Spheroidals: A Fundamental Curve Connecting Dispersion-supported Galaxies to Their Dark Matter Halos
Erik J. Tollerud, James S. Bullock, Genevieve J. Graves, Joe Wolf

TL;DR
This study uncovers a fundamental one-dimensional curve linking dispersion-supported galaxies across a vast luminosity range, revealing insights into galaxy formation efficiency and dark matter halo relationships.
Contribution
It introduces a new fundamental curve in MRL space that connects galaxy properties to dark matter halos, providing a unified framework across galaxy types and luminosities.
Findings
Galaxies scatter around a fundamental curve in MRL space.
Galaxy formation efficiency peaks at Mvir ~ 10^12 Msun.
Stellar systems like Globular Clusters do not follow the fundamental curve.
Abstract
We examine scaling relations of dispersion-supported galaxies over more than eight orders of magnitude in luminosity by transforming standard fundamental plane parameters into a space of mass (M1/2), radius (r1/2), and luminosity (L1/2). We find that from ultra-faint dwarf spheroidals to giant cluster spheroids, dispersion-supported galaxies scatter about a one-dimensional "fundamental curve" through this MRL space. The weakness of the M1/2-L1/2 slope on the faint end may imply that potential well depth limits galaxy formation in small galaxies, while the stronger dependence on L1/2 on the bright end suggests that baryonic physics limits galaxy formation in massive galaxies. The mass-radius projection of this curve can be compared to median dark matter halo mass profiles of LCDM halos in order to construct a virial mass-luminosity relationship (Mvir-L) for galaxies that spans seven…
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