Testing Feedback-Modified Dark Matter Haloes with Galaxy Rotation Curves: Estimation of Halo Parameters and Consistency with $\Lambda$CDM
Harley Katz, Federico Lelli, Stacy S. McGaugh, Arianna Di Cintio,, Chris B. Brook, James M. Schombert

TL;DR
This study tests baryonic feedback-modified dark matter halo models against galaxy rotation curves, finding that the DC14 profile aligns well with $ ext{Lambda}$CDM predictions and better explains observed galaxy dynamics than traditional NFW profiles.
Contribution
It demonstrates that baryonic feedback-modified halo profiles, specifically the DC14 model, fit galaxy rotation data better and are consistent with cosmological expectations, addressing the cusp-core problem.
Findings
DC14 profile provides better fits than NFW.
Halo parameters align with $ ext{Lambda}$CDM predictions.
Baryonic processes reconcile observations with cosmological models.
Abstract
Cosmological -body simulations predict dark matter (DM) haloes with steep central cusps (e.g. NFW, Navarro et al. 1996). This contradicts observations of gas kinematics in low-mass galaxies that imply the existence of shallow DM cores. Baryonic processes such as adiabatic contraction and gas outflows can, in principle, alter the initial DM density profile, yet their relative contributions to the halo transformation remain uncertain. Recent high resolution, cosmological hydrodynamic simulations (Di Cintio et al. 2014, DC14) predict that inner density profiles depend systematically on the ratio of stellar to DM mass (M/M). Using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo approach, we test the NFW and the M/M-dependent DC14 halo models against a sample of 147 galaxy rotation curves from the new {\it Spitzer} Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves (SPARC) data…
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