The DiskMass Survey. IV. The Dark-Matter-Dominated Galaxy UGC 463
Kyle B. Westfall (1), Matthew A. Bershady (2), Marc A. W. Verheijen, (1), David R. Andersen (3), Thomas P. K. Martinsson (1), Robert A. Swaters, (4), and Andrew Schechtman-Rook (2) ((1) Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, (2), Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed mass budget for galaxy UGC 463, revealing it is dark-matter dominated beyond one scale length and has a submaximal baryonic component, challenging the maximal disk hypothesis.
Contribution
It offers a novel, detailed dynamical analysis of UGC 463, including precise measurements of stellar velocity dispersions and mass-to-light ratios, and compares these with stellar population models.
Findings
Dark matter dominates beyond one scale length.
Baryonic-to-DM mass ratio is approximately 1:3 within 4.2 h_R.
The galaxy's disk is submaximal and stable with Q~2.
Abstract
We present a detailed and unique mass budget for the high-surface-brightness galaxy UGC 463, showing it is dominated by dark matter (DM) at radii beyond one scale length (h_R) and has a baryonic-to-DM mass ratio of approximately 1:3 within 4.2 h_R. Assuming a constant scale height (h_z, calculated via an empirical oblateness relation), we calculate dynamical disk mass surface densities from stellar kinematics, which provide vertical velocity dispersions after correcting for the shape of the stellar velocity ellipsoid (measured to have sigma_theta/sigma_R=1.04 +/- 0.22 and sigma_z/sigma_R=0.48 +/- 0.09). We isolate the stellar mass surface density by accounting for all gas mass components and find an average K-band mass-to-light ratio of 0.22 +/- 0.09 (ran) ^{+0.16}_{-0.15} (sys) M_{sun}/L_{sun}^{K}; Zibetti et al. and Bell et al. predict, respectively, 0.56 and 3.6 times our dynamical…
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