Can we measure the slopes of density profiles in dwarf spheroidal galaxies?
Klaudia Kowalczyk, Ewa L. Lokas, Stelios Kazantzidis, Lucio Mayer

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to assess how the orientation of dwarf spheroidal galaxies affects the accuracy of measuring their density profile slopes, revealing significant systematic biases.
Contribution
It demonstrates that line-of-sight orientation causes systematic errors in slope measurements, highlighting limitations of current methods for non-spherical dwarf galaxies.
Findings
Mass estimates vary by up to a factor of two depending on viewing angle.
Inferred density slopes are systematically over- or underestimated based on orientation.
Most dSphs are non-spherical, affecting the reliability of slope measurements.
Abstract
Using collisionless N-body simulations of dwarf galaxies orbiting the Milky Way (MW) we construct realistic models of dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies of the Local Group. The dwarfs are initially composed of stellar disks embedded in dark matter haloes with different inner density slopes and are placed on an eccentric orbit typical for MW subhaloes. After a few Gyr of evolution the stellar component is triaxial as a result of bar instability induced by tidal forces. Observing the simulated dwarfs along three principal axes of the stellar component we create mock data sets and determine the their half-light radii and line-of-sight velocity dispersions. Using the estimator proposed by Wolf et al. we calculate masses within half-light radii. The masses obtained this way are over(under)estimated by up to a factor of two when the line of sight is along the longest (shortest) axis of the…
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