Evolution of central dark matter of early-type galaxies up to z ~ 0.8
C. Tortora, N.R. Napolitano, R.P. Saglia, A.J. Romanowsky, G. Covone,, M. Capaccioli

TL;DR
This study examines how the central dark matter content of early-type galaxies evolves up to redshift 0.8, revealing that local galaxies are more dark matter dominated, with implications for galaxy formation models and the initial mass function.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of dark matter fraction evolution in early-type galaxies up to z ~ 0.8 using Jeans modeling and galaxy colors.
Findings
Local galaxies are more dark matter dominated than at higher redshifts.
Size and dark matter growth are inconsistent with passive evolution.
Minor mergers explain the observed evolution better than passive growth.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of dark and luminous matter in the central regions of early-type galaxies (ETGs) up to z ~ 0.8. We use a spectroscopically selected sample of 154 cluster and field galaxies from the EDisCS survey, covering a wide range in redshifts (z ~ 0.4-0.8), stellar masses ( ~ 10.5-11.5 dex) and velocity dispersions ( ~ 100-300 \, km/s). We obtain central dark matter (DM) fractions by determining the dynamical masses from Jeans modelling of galaxy aperture velocity dispersions and the from galaxy colours, and compare the results with local samples. We discuss how the correlations of central DM with galaxy size (i.e. the effective radius, ), and evolve as a function of redshift, finding clear indications that local galaxies are, on average, more DM dominated than their…
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