Fast rotations in galaxies at cosmic noon indicate central concentration of stars, dark matter or massive black holes
Fernanda Roman-Oliveira, Francesca Rizzo, Filippo Fraternali

TL;DR
This study combines high-resolution ALMA cold gas data with JWST near-infrared imaging to analyze galaxy rotation curves at cosmic noon, revealing central mass concentrations possibly due to black holes, bulges, or dark matter.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach by integrating ALMA and JWST data to investigate the inner dynamics of high-redshift galaxies, highlighting potential deviations from standard dark matter profiles.
Findings
Inner rotation velocities are underpredicted by models.
Discrepancies suggest overmassive black holes or dense bulges.
Central mass concentrations may indicate non-standard dark matter profiles.
Abstract
The rotation curves of regularly rotating disc galaxies are a unique probe of the gravitational potential and dark matter distribution. Until recently, matter decomposition of rotation curves at was challenging, not only due to the lack of high resolution kinematic data but also of both suitable photometry to accurately trace the stellar surface density and spatially-resolved sub-mm observations to trace the cold gas distribution. In this paper, we analyse three galaxies from the Archival Large Program to Advance Kinematic Analysis (ALPAKA) sample, combining highly resolved cold gas observations from ALMA with rest-frame near-infrared imaging from JWST to investigate their dynamical properties and constrain their dark matter halos. The galaxies, initially classified as regularly rotating discs based on ALMA observations alone, appear in JWST as extended and symmetric stellar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
