Core Formation in High-z Massive Haloes: Heating by Post Compaction Satellites and Response to AGN Outflows
Avishai Dekel, Jonathan Freundlich, Fangzhou Jiang, Sharon Lapiner,, Andreas Burkert, Daniel Ceverino, Xiaolong Du, Reinhard Genzel, Joel Primack

TL;DR
This paper proposes a hybrid model where satellite heating via dynamical friction and AGN outflows collaboratively create dark matter cores in massive high-redshift haloes, addressing discrepancies in observed galaxy rotation curves.
Contribution
It introduces a combined analytic, semi-analytic, and simulation-based framework demonstrating how satellite compaction and AGN feedback jointly form dark matter cores in massive haloes at high redshift.
Findings
Satellites of >10^{11.3} M_\odot become compact enough to heat dark matter cusps.
Heating occurs within half a virial time at z~2, leading to core formation.
AGN feedback is effective in haloes ≥10^{12} M_\odot, supporting core creation.
Abstract
Observed rotation curves in star-forming galaxies indicate a puzzling dearth of dark matter in extended flat cores within haloes of mass at . This is not reproduced by current cosmological simulations, and supernova-driven outflows are not effective in such massive haloes. We address a hybrid scenario where post-compaction merging satellites heat up the dark-matter cusps by dynamical friction, allowing AGN-driven outflows to generate cores. Using analytic and semi-analytic models (SatGen), we estimate the dynamical-friction heating as a function of satellite compactness for a cosmological sequence of mergers. Cosmological simulations (VELA) demonstrate that satellites of initial virial masses , that undergo wet compactions, become sufficiently compact for significant heating. Constituting a major fraction of the accretion onto…
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