The core-cusp problem: a matter of perspective
Anna Genina, Alejandro Benitez-Llambay, Carlos S. Frenk, Shaun Cole,, Azadeh Fattahi, Julio F. Navarro, Kyle A. Oman, Till Sawala, Tom Theuns

TL;DR
This study challenges previous claims that dwarf galaxies have constant-density cores by showing that observational methods can falsely detect cores in simulated cuspy dark matter profiles due to asphericity and viewing angle effects.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that common mass estimation techniques can misidentify cuspy profiles as cores in simulated dwarf galaxies, highlighting the impact of asphericity and orientation.
Findings
Mass estimators often falsely detect cores in cuspy profiles.
Asphericity and misalignment cause significant variation in inferred density slopes.
Viewing angle critically affects the interpretation of galaxy density profiles.
Abstract
The existence of two kinematically and chemically distinct stellar subpopulations in the Sculptor and Fornax dwarf galaxies offers the opportunity to constrain the density profile of their matter haloes by measuring the mass contained within the well-separated half-light radii of the two metallicity subpopulations. Walker and Penarrubia have used this approach to argue that data for these galaxies are consistent with constant-density `cores' in their inner regions and rule out `cuspy' Navarro-Frenk-White (NFW) profiles with high statistical significance, particularly in the case of Sculptor. We test the validity of these claims using dwarf galaxies in the APOSTLE (A Project Of Simulating The Local Environment) Lambda cold dark matter cosmological hydrodynamics simulations of analogues of the Local Group. These galaxies all have NFW dark matter density profiles and a subset of them…
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