Extended Stellar Components of Galaxies & the Nature of Dark Matter
Chris Power, Aaron S. G. Robotham

TL;DR
Deep galaxy observations reveal faint stellar components that can potentially test dark matter models, but spatial structure differences are subtle and comparable to galaxy-to-galaxy variation, complicating such tests.
Contribution
This study uses cosmological simulations to compare the spatial structure of extended stellar components in different dark matter models, highlighting observational challenges.
Findings
Significant differences in ESC spatial structure between CDM and WDM models.
ESC kinematics and orbital structure are similar across models.
Current observations cannot definitively distinguish dark matter models based on ESC spatial structure.
Abstract
Deep observations of galaxies reveal faint extended stellar components (hereafter ESCs) of streams, shells, and halos. These are a natural prediction of hierarchical galaxy formation, as accreted satellite galaxies are tidally disrupted by their host. We investigate whether or not global properties of the ESC could be used to test of dark matter, reasoning that they should be sensitive to the abundance of low-mass satellites, and therefore the underlying dark matter model. Using cosmological simulations of galaxy formation in the favoured Cold Dark Matter (CDM) and Warm Dark Matter (WDM) models (=0.5,1,2 keV/), which suppress the abundance of low-mass satellites, we find that the kinematics and orbital structure of the ESC is consistent across models. However, we find striking differences in its spatial structure, as anticipated -- a factor of 10 drop in…
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