When the Jeans don't fit: How stellar feedback drives stellar kinematics and complicates dynamical modeling in low-mass galaxies
Kareem El-Badry, Andrew R. Wetzel, Marla Geha, Eliot Quataert, Philip, F. Hopkins, Dusan Kere\v{s}, T.K. Chan, and Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere

TL;DR
Stellar feedback causes potential fluctuations in low-mass galaxies, affecting stellar kinematics and leading to inaccuracies in Jeans dynamical modeling, especially during active star formation periods.
Contribution
This study demonstrates how stellar feedback-driven potential fluctuations impact stellar kinematics and the reliability of Jeans modeling in low-mass galaxies, highlighting the limitations of equilibrium assumptions.
Findings
Stellar velocity dispersion fluctuates with starburst cycles.
Jeans modeling overestimates or underestimates mass depending on feedback phase.
Potential fluctuations cause ~20% errors in dynamical mass estimates.
Abstract
In low-mass galaxies, stellar feedback can drive gas outflows that generate non-equilibrium fluctuations in the gravitational potential. Using cosmological zoom-in baryonic simulations from the Feedback in Realistic Environments (FIRE) project, we investigate how these fluctuations affect stellar kinematics and the reliability of Jeans dynamical modeling in low-mass galaxies. We find that stellar velocity dispersion and anisotropy profiles fluctuate significantly over the course of galaxies' starburst cycles. We therefore predict an observable correlation between star formation rate and stellar kinematics: dwarf galaxies with higher recent star formation rates should have systemically higher stellar velocity dispersions. This prediction provides an observational test of the role of stellar feedback in regulating both stellar and dark-matter densities in dwarf galaxies. We find that…
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