Cuspy No More: How Outflows Affect the Central Dark Matter and Baryon Distribution in Lambda CDM Galaxies
F. Governato (1), A. Zolotov (2), A. Pontzen (3), C. Christensen (4),, S.H. Oh (5,6), A.M. Brooks (7), T. Quinn (1), S. Shen (8), J. Wadsley (9), ((1) Univ of Washington, (2) Hebrew Univ. (3) Univ. of Oxford, (4) Univ. of, Arizona, (5) Univ. of Western Australia, (6) CAASTRO

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to show that gas outflows driven by star formation significantly flatten the central dark matter profiles in galaxies, aligning theoretical predictions with observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that repeated gas outflows can transform cuspy dark matter profiles into flatter ones in Lambda CDM galaxy simulations, matching observed galaxy profiles.
Findings
Gas outflows flatten dark matter cusps in simulated galaxies.
Central dark matter slope correlates with stellar mass.
Inner mass within 500 pc remains nearly constant across galaxy sizes.
Abstract
We examine the evolution of the inner dark matter (DM) and baryonic density profile of a new sample of simulated field galaxies using fully cosmological, Lambda CDM, high resolution SPH + N-Body simulations. These simulations include explicit H2 and metal cooling, star formation (SF) and supernovae (SNe) driven gas outflows. Starting at high redshift, rapid, repeated gas outflows following bursty SF transfer energy to the DM component and significantly flatten the originally `cuspy' central DM mass profile of galaxies with present day stellar masses in the 10^4.5 -- 10^9.8 Msolar range. At z=0, the central slope of the DM density profile of our galaxies (measured between 0.3 and 0.7 kpc from their centre) is well fitted by rhoDM propto r^alpha with alpha \simeq -0.5 + 0.35 log_10(Mstar/10^8Msolar) where Mstar is the stellar mass of the galaxy and 4 < log_10 Mstar < 9.4. These values…
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