Local Group dwarf galaxies as dark matter probes
G. Battaglia, J.M. Arroyo Polonio, R. Pascale, M. Benito, R. Leaman, G. Thomas

TL;DR
This paper discusses how Local Group dwarf galaxies can be used to investigate the nature of dark matter by analyzing their dark matter halo properties and the impact of baryonic processes.
Contribution
It highlights the importance of systematic observational studies of dwarf galaxies to distinguish between dark matter models and baryonic effects.
Findings
Dwarf galaxies provide key insights into dark matter properties.
Accurate velocity and metallicity measurements are crucial for modeling.
Upcoming telescopes will enable detailed studies of dwarf galaxy halos.
Abstract
Unveiling the fundamental nature of non-baryonic dark matter (DM) has profound implications for our understanding of the Universe and of the physical laws that govern it. Its manifestation as an additional source of matter necessary to explain astrophysical and cosmological observations indicates either a breakdown of General Relativity or that the current Standard Model of Particle Physics is incomplete. In the standard Cold DM (CDM) paradigm, DM consists of collisionless non-relativistic particles with negligible non-gravitational interactions. This simple hypothesis is very successful on large and intermediate scales, but faces challenges on small galactic scales. Local Group (LG) dwarf galaxies can play a fundamental role to elucidate whether these challenges stem from poorly understood fundamental baryonic processes or instead indicate that alternative DM scenarios need to be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
