Cusp or core? Revisiting the globular cluster timing problem in Fornax
Noah Meadows, Julio F. Navarro, Isabel Santos-Santos, Alejandro, Benitez-Llambay, Carlos Frenk

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to analyze the globular cluster timing problem in Fornax, showing that GCs' positions do not necessarily imply a cored or cuspy dark matter profile, challenging previous assumptions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that globular clusters in Fornax have only modestly experienced dynamical friction, and their current distribution does not conclusively indicate a cored or cuspy dark matter halo.
Findings
GCs stall at about 1/3 of the core radius in cored halos
GCs continue to decay toward the center at reduced rates
Spatial distribution of GCs does not rule out a cuspy dark matter profile
Abstract
We use N-body simulations to revisit the globular cluster (GC) ``timing problem'' in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal (dSph). In agreement with earlier work, we find that, due to dynamical friction, GCs sink to the center of dark matter halos with a cuspy inner density profile but ``stall'' at roughly 1/3 of the core radius () in halos with constant-density cores. The timescales to sink or stall depend strongly on the mass of the GC and on the initial orbital radius, but are essentially the same for either cuspy (NFW) or cored halos normalized to have the same total mass within . Arguing against a cusp on the basis that GCs have not sunk to the center is thus no different from arguing against a core, unless all clusters are today at . This would imply a core radius exceeding kpc, much larger than seems plausible in any…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
