Missing dark matter in dwarf galaxies?
Kyle A. Oman, Julio F. Navarro, Laura V. Sales, Azadeh Fattahi, Carlos, S. Frenk, Till Sawala, Matthieu Schaller, Simon D. M. White

TL;DR
This study combines simulations and observations to investigate the apparent lack of dark matter in some dwarf galaxies, suggesting potential issues with current cosmological models or measurement uncertainties.
Contribution
It identifies a discrepancy between observed baryonic masses and expected dark matter content in dwarf galaxies, challenging the standard {b2}CDM paradigm.
Findings
Some dwarf galaxies have higher baryonic masses than expected for their rotation speeds.
The observed dark matter deficit cannot be explained by star formation-induced cores.
Systematic errors in inclination measurements may resolve the discrepancy.
Abstract
We use cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of the APOSTLE project along with high-quality rotation curve observations to examine the fraction of baryons in {\Lambda}CDM haloes that collect into galaxies. This 'galaxy formation efficiency' correlates strongly and with little scatter with halo mass, dropping steadily towards dwarf galaxies. The baryonic mass of a galaxy may thus be used to place a lower limit on total halo mass and, consequently, on its asymptotic maximum circular velocity. A number of observed dwarfs seem to violate this constraint, having baryonic masses up to ten times higher than expected from their rotation speeds, or, alternatively, rotating at only half the speed expected for their mass. Taking the data at face value, either these systems have formed galaxies with extraordinary efficiency - highly unlikely given their shallow potential wells - or their dark…
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