Measuring Dark Matter in Galaxies: The Mass Fraction Within 5 Effective Radii
William E. Harris, Rhea-Silvia Remus, Gretchen L. H. Harris, Iurii V., Babyk

TL;DR
This study measures the dark matter fraction within five effective radii of 102 early-type galaxies using X-ray gas profiles, finding general agreement with simulations and variations linked to galaxy type and feedback processes.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate dark matter fractions in galaxies using X-ray gas profiles and compares results with other techniques and simulations.
Findings
Median dark matter fraction within 5 r_e is 0.8-0.9.
Disk galaxies tend to have higher dark matter fractions than ellipticals.
Observed scatter exceeds simulation predictions, especially in certain mass ranges.
Abstract
Large galaxies may contain an "atmosphere" of hot interstellar X-ray gas, and the temperature and radial density profile of this gas can be used to measure the total mass of the galaxy contained within a given radius r. We use this technique for 102 early-type galaxies (ETGs) with stellar masses M_* > 10^10 M_Sun, to evaluate the mass fraction of dark matter (DM) within the fiducial radius r = 5 r_e, denoted f_5 = f_{DM}(5r_e). On average, these systems have a median f_5 = 0.8 - 0.9 with a typical galaxy-to-galaxy scatter +-0.15. Comparisons with mass estimates made through the alternative techniques of satellite dynamics (e.g. velocity distributions of globular clusters, planetary nebulae, satellite dwarfs) as well as strong lensing show encouraging consistency over the same range of stellar mass. We find that many of the disk galaxies (S0/SA0/SB0) have a significantly higher mean…
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