EDGE: Dark matter core creation depends on the timing of star formation
Claudia Muni, Andrew Pontzen, Justin I. Read, Oscar Agertz, Martin P., Rey, Ethan Taylor, Stacy Y. Kim, Emily I. Gray

TL;DR
This study reveals that the timing of star formation relative to reionisation critically influences dark matter core creation in dwarf galaxies, with post-reionisation star formation leading to core formation and pre-reionisation star formation indicating denser centers.
Contribution
It introduces the importance of star formation timing relative to reionisation in dark matter core creation, providing a new parameter and fitting formulas for this dependence.
Findings
Post-reionisation star formation decreases dark matter density.
Pre-reionisation star formation correlates with higher central dark matter density.
The ratio of star formation after to before reionisation predicts core formation.
Abstract
We study feedback-driven cold dark matter core creation in the EDGE suite of radiation-hydrodynamical dwarf galaxy simulations. Understanding this process is crucial when using observed dwarf galaxies to constrain the particle nature of dark matter. While previous studies have shown the stellar-mass to halo-mass ratio determines the extent of core creation, we find that in low-mass dwarfs there is a crucial additional effect, namely the timing of star formation relative to reionisation. Sustained post-reionisation star formation decreases central dark matter density through potential fluctuations; conversely, pre-reionisation star formation is too short-lived to have such an effect. In fact, large stellar masses accrued prior to reionisation are a strong indicator of early collapse, and therefore indicative of an increased central dark matter density. We…
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