The SLUGGS Survey: The mass distribution in early-type galaxies within five effective radii and beyond
Adebusola B. Alabi, Duncan A. Forbes, Aaron J. Romanowsky, Jean P., Brodie, Jay Strader, Joachim Janz, Vincenzo Pota, Nicola Pastorello,, Christopher Usher, Lee R. Spitler, Caroline Foster, Zachary G. Jennings,, Alexa Villaume, Sreeja Kartha

TL;DR
This study uses globular cluster kinematic data to map mass distribution in 23 early-type galaxies, revealing dark matter fractions and halo properties that challenge simple galaxy models and suggest varied assembly histories.
Contribution
It provides detailed mass profiles extending beyond five effective radii in early-type galaxies using high-precision GC kinematics, highlighting variations in dark matter content and halo structure.
Findings
Dark matter fraction increases with galaxy mass within 5 R_e.
Low-mass galaxies (~10^11 M_sun) have unexpectedly low dark matter fractions.
Mass-to-light ratio gradients vary with galaxy mass and radius.
Abstract
We study mass distributions within and beyond 5~effective radii () in 23 early-type galaxies from the SLUGGS survey, using their globular cluster (GC) kinematic data. The data are obtained with Keck/DEIMOS spectrograph, and consist of line-of-sight velocities for ~ GCs, measured with a high precision of ~15 per GC and extending out to . We obtain the mass distribution in each galaxy using the tracer mass estimator of Watkins et al. and account for kinematic substructures, rotation of the GC systems and galaxy flattening in our mass estimates. The observed scatter between our mass estimates and results from the literature is less than 0.2 dex. The dark matter fraction within () increases from ~ to ~ for low- and high-mass galaxies, respectively, with some intermediate-mass galaxies…
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