Dwarf Galaxy Dark Matter Density Profiles Inferred from Stellar and Gas Kinematics
Joshua J. Adams (1,2), Joshua D. Simon (1), Maximilian H. Fabricius, (3), Remco C. E. van den Bosch (4), John C. Barentine (5), Ralf Bender (3,6),, Karl Gebhardt (5,7), Gary J. Hill (5,7,8), Jeremy D. Murphy (9), R. A., Swaters (10), Jens Thomas (3)

TL;DR
This study measures dark matter density profiles in dwarf galaxies using stellar and gas kinematics, finding generally consistent shallow slopes and exploring potential correlations with baryonic properties to test dark matter models.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution kinematic data and compares stellar and gas tracers to assess the robustness of dark matter profile measurements in dwarf galaxies.
Findings
Gas and stellar kinematic estimates of dark matter slopes are generally consistent.
Dark matter halos are not under concentrated at half-maximum velocity radii.
Weak correlations found between dark matter profile slopes and baryonic properties.
Abstract
We present new constraints on the density profiles of dark matter (DM) halos in seven nearby dwarf galaxies from measurements of their integrated stellar light and gas kinematics. The gas kinematics of low mass galaxies frequently suggest that they contain constant density DM cores, while N-body simulations instead predict a cuspy profile. We present a data set of high resolution integral field spectroscopy on seven galaxies and measure the stellar and gas kinematics simultaneously. Using Jeans modeling on our full sample, we examine whether gas kinematics in general produce shallower density profiles than are derived from the stars. Although 2/7 galaxies show some localized differences in their rotation curves between the two tracers, estimates of the central logarithmic slope of the DM density profile, gamma, are generally robust. The mean and standard deviation of the logarithmic…
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