Tag Archives: astronomy

Exploring the Dark Matter Disc Model in Dwarf Galaxies: Insights from the LITTLE THINGS Sample

Francesco Sylos LabiniRoberto Capuzzo-DolcettaGiordano De MarzoMatteo Straccamore

ABSTRACT We conducted an analysis of the velocity field of dwarf galaxies in the LITTLE THINGS sample, focusing on deriving 2D velocity maps that encompass both the transverse and radial velocity fields. Within the range of radial distances where velocity anisotropies are sufficiently small for the disc to be considered rotationally supported, and where the warped geometry of the disc can be neglected, we reconstructed the rotation curve while taking into account the effect of the asymmetric drift. To fit the rotation curves, we employed the standard halo model and the dark matter disc (DMD) model, which assumes that dark matter is primarily confined to the galactic discs and can be traced by the distribution of HI. Interestingly, our analysis revealed that the fits from the DMD model are statistically comparable to those obtained using the standard halo model, but the inferred masses of the galaxies in the DMD model are approximately 10 to 100 times smaller than the masses inferred in the standard halo model. In the DMD model, the inner slope of the rotation curve is directly related to a linear combination of the surface density profiles of the stellar and gas components, which generally exhibit a flat core. Consequently, the observation of a linear relationship between the rotation curve and the radius in the disc central regions is consistent with the framework of the DMD model.

Continue reading Exploring the Dark Matter Disc Model in Dwarf Galaxies: Insights from the LITTLE THINGS Sample

Generalized rotation curves of the Milky Way from the GAIA DR3 data-set: constraints on mass models


https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2410.14307

One of the major challenges in astrophysics is understanding how much dark matter exists and how it is distributed. In the case of our galaxy, the Milky Way, to study this problem, we start with observations of the distribution of stars and gas and their velocity field.

Thanks to data from the Gaia satellite, it is now possible to analyze large samples of stars for which both the three-dimensional position and the three components of velocity are known. From these observations, it is possible to reconstruct the velocity field in three dimensions, allowing us to characterize the kinematics of the Milky Way.

To connect kinematics to dynamics, we must assume that the galaxy has reached a steady equilibrium, where stars move in closed circular orbits and the entire system is stable and does not change over time.

Continue reading Generalized rotation curves of the Milky Way from the GAIA DR3 data-set: constraints on mass models

Rotation curves of the Milky Way and of external galaxies and a new mass model


Research Center for Astronomy and Applied Mathematics
of the Academy of Athens 
Webinar: TUESDAY 9 April 2024, 12:00 local time (UTC+3)
Rotation curves of the Milky Way and of external galaxies and a new mass model
Francesco Sylos Labini
Enrico Fermi Research Center, Rome, Italy
Abstract:
  
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