Semi-empirical catalog of early-type galaxy-halo systems: dark matter density profiles, halo contraction and dark matter annihilation strength
Kyu-Hyun Chae, Andrey V. Kravtsov, Joshua A. Frieman, Mariangela, Bernardi

TL;DR
This study constructs a semi-empirical catalog of early-type galaxy-halo systems, revealing systematic deviations in dark matter profiles from standard models and supporting halo contraction, with implications for dark matter annihilation signals.
Contribution
It introduces a novel semi-empirical method to derive dark matter density profiles in early-type galaxies, highlighting systematic halo contraction effects not captured by traditional N-body simulations.
Findings
Dark matter density profiles deviate from NFW and Einasto profiles.
Halo contraction enhances inner dark matter density by up to 3-4 times.
Inner density slope averages around 1.3, steeper than NFW.
Abstract
With SDSS galaxy data and halo data from up-to-date N-body simulations we construct a semi-empirical catalog (SEC) of early-type systems by making a self-consistent bivariate statistical match of stellar mass (M_star) and velocity dispersion (sigma) with halo virial mass (M_vir). We then assign stellar mass profile and velocity dispersion profile parameters to each system in the SEC using their observed correlations with M_star and sigma. Simultaneously, we solve for dark matter density profile of each halo using the spherical Jeans equation. The resulting dark matter density profiles deviate in general from the dissipationless profile of NFW or Einasto and their mean inner density slope and concentration vary systematically with M_vir. Statistical tests of the distribution of profiles at fixed M_vir rule out the null hypothesis that it follows the distribution predicted by N-body…
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