Dark Matter In Disk Galaxies II: Density Profiles as Constraints on Feedback Scenarios
Peter R Hague, Mark I Wilkinson

TL;DR
This paper uses rotation curve data and a feedback model to constrain dark matter density profiles in galaxies, highlighting the role of baryonic feedback in resolving the cusp-core problem.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining MCMC analysis with feedback modeling to constrain dark matter halo profiles and baryonic influence radii in nearby galaxies.
Findings
Some galaxies exclude both cored and cuspy profiles, indicating complex baryonic effects.
Feedback from central sources can produce observed halo profiles without gas removal.
Extended cores are better modeled with split power-law profiles, avoiding unphysical features.
Abstract
The disparity between the density profiles of galactic dark matter haloes predicted by dark matter only cosmological simulations and those inferred from rotation curve decomposition, the so-called cusp-core problem, suggests that baryonic physics has an impact on dark matter density in the central regions of galaxies. Feedback from black holes, supernovae and massive stars may each play a role by removing matter from the centre of the galaxy on shorter timescales than the dynamical time of the dark matter halo. Our goal in this paper is to determine constraints on such feedback scenarios based on the observed properties of a set of nearby galaxies. Using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) analysis of galactic rotation curves, via a method developed in a previous paper, we constrain density profiles and an estimated minimum radius for baryon influence, , which we couple with a…
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