
TL;DR
This paper reviews the internal properties of dark matter halos, comparing predictions from simulations with observational efforts to measure their structure, shape, and age, to test cosmological models and understand galaxy formation.
Contribution
It synthesizes simulation predictions with recent observational data on dark matter halos, emphasizing the importance of halo age and substructure in cosmology.
Findings
Simulations predict universal density profiles and shapes for halos.
Observational lensing studies are beginning to measure halo substructure and relaxation.
Halo age may significantly influence baryonic content and galaxy evolution.
Abstract
The balance of evidence indicates that individual galaxies and groups or clusters of galaxies are embedded in enormous distributions of cold, weakly interacting dark matter. These dark matter 'halos' provide the scaffolding for all luminous structure in the universe, and their properties comprise an essential part of the current cosmological model. I review the internal properties of dark matter halos, focussing on the simple, universal trends predicted by numerical simulations of structure formation. Simulations indicate that halos should all have roughly the same spherically-averaged density profile and kinematic structure, and predict simple distributions of shape, formation history and substructure in density and kinematics, over an enormous range of halo mass and for all common variants of the concordance cosmology. I describe observational progress towards testing these…
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