# Stellar dynamics in the strong-lensing central galaxy of Abell 1201: A   low stellar mass-to-light ratio, a large central compact mass, and a standard   dark matter halo

**Authors:** Russell J. Smith, John R. Lucey, Alastair C. Edge (CEA, Durham)

arXiv: 1706.07055 · 2017-08-09

## TL;DR

This study combines stellar kinematics and lensing data to analyze the mass distribution of a galaxy in Abell 1201, revealing a large central mass, a standard dark matter halo, and a low stellar mass-to-light ratio, with implications for galaxy formation models.

## Contribution

It provides a detailed dynamical analysis of a BCG using integral field spectroscopy and lensing, highlighting the importance of central mass components and their impact on dark matter and stellar mass estimates.

## Key findings

- Detection of a large central mass component (~2.5×10^{10} M_sun)
- Confirmation of a standard NFW dark matter profile with slope γ ≈ 1.0
- Stellar mass-to-light ratio consistent with a Milky Way-like IMF

## Abstract

We analyse the stellar kinematics of the z=0.169 brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) in Abell 1201, using integral field observations with VLT/MUSE. This galaxy has a gravitationally-lensed arc located at unusually small radius ($\sim$5 kpc), allowing us to constrain the mass distribution using lensing and stellar dynamical information over the same radial range. We measure a velocity dispersion profile which is nearly flat at $\sigma$ $\approx$ 285 km/s in the inner $\sim$5 kpc, and then rises steadily to $\sigma$ $\approx$ 360 km/s at $\sim$30 kpc. We analyse the kinematics using axisymmetric Jeans models, finding that the data require both a significant dark matter halo (to fit the rising outer profile) and a compact central component, with mass $M_{\rm cen}$ $\approx$ 2.5$\times$10$^{10}$ $M_\odot$ (to fit the flat {\sigma} in the inner regions). The latter component could represent a super-massive black hole, in which case it would be among the largest known to date. Alternatively $M_{\rm cen}$ could describe excess mass associated with a gradient in the stellar mass-to-light ratio. Imposing a standard NFW dark matter density profile, we recover a stellar mass-to-light ratio $\Upsilon$ which is consistent with a Milky-Way-like initial mass function (IMF). By anchoring the models using the lensing mass constraint, we break the degeneracy between $\Upsilon$ and the inner slope $\gamma$ of the dark matter profile, finding $\gamma$=1.0$\pm$0.1, consistent with the NFW form. We show that our results are quite sensitive to the treatment of the central mass in the models. Neglecting $M_{\rm cen}$ biases the results towards both a heavier-than-Salpeter IMF and a shallower-than-NFW dark matter slope ($\gamma$ $\approx$ 0.5).

## Full text

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## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.07055/full.md

## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.07055/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.07055