The mass and angular momentum distribution of simulated massive early-type galaxies to large radii
Xufen Wu, Ortwin Gerhard, Thorsten Naab, Ludwig Oser, Inma, Martinez-Valpuesta, Michael Hilz, Eugene Churazov, Natalya Lyskova

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze the mass distribution, kinematics, and angular momentum of massive early-type galaxies, revealing correlations between galaxy mass, shape, and angular momentum at large radii.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the mass profiles, kinematic properties, and angular momentum distribution of simulated massive galaxies, extending analysis to large radii using a novel smoothing technique.
Findings
Dark matter halos follow simple power-law profiles outside a few kpc.
Massive galaxies have nearly flat circular velocity curves at large radii.
Dark matter fractions increase with galaxy size and mass.
Abstract
We study the dark and luminous mass distributions, circular velocity curves (CVC), line-of-sight kinematics, and angular momenta for a sample of 42 cosmological zoom simulations of massive galaxies. Using a temporal smoothing technique, we are able to reach large radii. We find that: (i)The dark matter halo density profiles outside a few kpc follow simple power-law models, with flat dark matter CVCs for lower-mass systems, and rising CVCs for high-mass haloes. The projected stellar density distributions at large radii can be fitted by Sersic functions with n>10, larger than for typical ETGs. (ii)The massive systems have nearly flat total CVCs at large radii, while the less massive systems have mildly decreasing CVCs. The slope of the CVC at large radii correlates with v_circ itself. (iii)The dark matter fractions within Re are in the range 15-30% and increase to 40-65% at 5Re. Larger…
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