Dark matter heats up in dwarf galaxies
J. I. Read, M. G. Walker, P. Steger

TL;DR
This study shows that bursty star formation in dwarf galaxies can kinematically heat dark matter, leading to a correlation between stellar mass and central dark matter density, supporting models of dark matter heating.
Contribution
The paper provides observational evidence linking star formation history to dark matter density profiles in dwarf galaxies, confirming predictions of dark matter heating models.
Findings
Galaxies with older star formation have higher central dark matter densities.
Galaxies with extended star formation have lower central dark matter densities.
Dark matter density decreases with increasing stellar mass-to-halo mass ratio.
Abstract
Gravitational potential fluctuations driven by bursty star formation can kinematically 'heat up' dark matter at the centres of dwarf galaxies. A key prediction of such models is that, at a fixed dark matter halo mass, dwarfs with a higher stellar mass will have a lower central dark matter density. We use stellar kinematics and HI gas rotation curves to infer the inner dark matter densities of eight dwarf spheroidal and eight dwarf irregular galaxies with a wide range of star formation histories. For all galaxies, we estimate the dark matter density at a common radius of 150pc, . We find that our sample of dwarfs falls into two distinct classes. Those that stopped forming stars over 6Gyrs ago favour central densities , consistent with cold dark matter cusps, while those with more…
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