The impact of gas disc flaring on rotation curve decomposition and revisiting baryonic and dark-matter relations for nearby galaxies
Pavel E. Mancera Pi\~na, Filippo Fraternali, Tom Oosterloo, Elizabeth, A. K. Adams, Enrico di Teodoro, Cecilia Bacchini, and Giuliano Iorio

TL;DR
This study investigates how gas disc flaring affects rotation curve analysis and dark matter estimates in nearby galaxies, finding minimal impact for most but significant effects in gas-rich dwarfs, and revisiting baryonic-halo relations.
Contribution
It provides a self-consistent method to account for gas disc flaring in rotation curve decomposition and revisits key baryonic-halo relations with a carefully selected galaxy sample.
Findings
Gas flaring has minor effects on most galaxies' rotation curves.
Baryonic-to-halo mass relations increase with halo mass up to 10^12 M_sun.
Most halos follow the concentration-mass relation from cosmological simulations.
Abstract
Gas discs of late-type galaxies are flared, with scale heights increasing with the distance from the galaxy centres and often reaching kpc scales. We study the effects of gas disc flaring on the recovered dark matter halo parameters from rotation curve decomposition. For this, we carefully select a sample of 32 dwarf and spiral galaxies with high-quality neutral gas, molecular gas, and stellar mass profiles, robust H\,{\sc i} rotation curves obtained via 3D kinematic modelling, and reliable bulge-disc decomposition. By assuming vertical hydrostatic equilibrium, we derive the scale heights of the atomic and molecular gas discs and fit dark matter haloes to the rotation curves self-consistently. We find that the effect of the gas flaring in the rotation curve decomposition can play an important role only for the smallest, gas-dominated dwarfs, while for most of the galaxies the effect is…
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