Dark and luminous matter in THINGS dwarf galaxies
Se-Heon Oh, W. J. G. de Blok, Elias Brinks, Fabian Walter, Robert, C. Kennicutt Jr

TL;DR
This study models the dark matter distribution in seven dwarf galaxies from THINGS, revealing core-like profiles that differ from traditional LCDM predictions but align with recent simulations including baryonic feedback.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution observational mass models of dwarf galaxies and compares them with LCDM simulations, highlighting the impact of baryonic processes on dark matter profiles.
Findings
Dwarf galaxies are dark matter dominated over most radii.
Observed rotation curves favor core-like dark matter profiles over cuspy ones.
Inner density slopes are shallower than pure dark matter simulations predict.
Abstract
We present mass models for the dark matter component of seven dwarf galaxies taken from "The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey" (THINGS) and compare these with those from numerical Lambda Cold Dark Matter (LCDM) simulations. The THINGS high-resolution data significantly reduce observational uncertainties and thus allow us to derive accurate dark matter distributions in these systems. We here use the bulk velocity fields when deriving the rotation curves of the galaxies. Compared to other types of velocity fields, the bulk velocity field minimizes the effect of small-scale random motions more effectively and traces the underlying kinematics of a galaxy more properly. The "Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey" (SINGS) 3.6 micron and ancillary optical data are used for separating the baryons from their total matter content in the galaxies. The sample dwarf galaxies are found to be dark matter…
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