The Exponential and Gaussian Density Profiles of HI and Fe II in the Gaseous Halo of the Milky Way

2017 ◽  
Vol 58 (4C) ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 633 ◽  
pp. L3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nushkia Chamba ◽  
Ignacio Trujillo ◽  
Johan H. Knapen

Now almost 70 years since its introduction, the effective or half-light radius has become a very popular choice for characterising galaxy size. However, the effective radius measures the concentration of light within galaxies and thus does not capture our intuitive definition of size which is related to the edge or boundary of objects. For this reason, we aim to demonstrate the undesirable consequence of using the effective radius to draw conclusions about the nature of faint ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) when compared to dwarfs and Milky Way-like galaxies. Instead of the effective radius, we use a measure of galaxy size based on the location of the gas density threshold required for star formation. Compared to the effective radius, this physically motivated definition places the sizes much closer to the boundary of a galaxy. Therefore, considering the sizes and stellar mass density profiles of UDGs and regular dwarfs, we find that the UDGs have sizes that are within the size range of dwarfs. We also show that currently known UDGs do not have sizes comparable to Milky Way-like objects. We find that, on average, UDGs are ten times smaller in extension than Milky Way-like galaxies. These results show that the use of size estimators sensitive to the concentration of light can lead to misleading results.


2017 ◽  
Vol 470 (1) ◽  
pp. 522-538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Sandford ◽  
Andreas H. W. Küpper ◽  
Kathryn V. Johnston ◽  
Jürg Diemand

Abstract Simulations of tidal streams show that close encounters with dark matter subhaloes induce density gaps and distortions in on-sky path along the streams. Accordingly, observing disrupted streams in the Galactic halo would substantiate the hypothesis that dark matter substructure exists there, while in contrast, observing collimated streams with smoothly varying density profiles would place strong upper limits on the number density and mass spectrum of subhaloes. Here, we examine several measures of stellar stream ‘disruption' and their power to distinguish between halo potentials with and without substructure and with different global shapes. We create and evolve a population of 1280 streams on a range of orbits in the Via Lactea II simulation of a Milky Way-like halo, replete with a full mass range of Λcold dark matter subhaloes, and compare it to two control stream populations evolved in smooth spherical and smooth triaxial potentials, respectively. We find that the number of gaps observed in a stellar stream is a poor indicator of the halo potential, but that (i) the thinness of the stream on-sky, (ii) the symmetry of the leading and trailing tails and (iii) the deviation of the tails from a low-order polynomial path on-sky (‘path regularity') distinguish between the three potentials more effectively. We furthermore find that globular cluster streams on low-eccentricity orbits far from the galactic centre (apocentric radius ∼30–80 kpc) are most powerful in distinguishing between the three potentials. If they exist, such streams will shortly be discoverable and mapped in high dimensions with near-future photometric and spectroscopic surveys.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (11) ◽  
pp. 1550056 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramil Izmailov ◽  
Alexander A. Potapov ◽  
Alexander I. Filippov ◽  
Mithun Ghosh ◽  
Kamal K. Nandi

We investigate the stability of circular material orbits in the analytic galactic metric recently derived by Harko et al., Mod. Phys. Lett. A29, 1450049 (2014). It turns out that stability depends more strongly on the dark matter central density ρ0 than on other parameters of the solution. This property then yields an upper limit on ρ0 for each individual galaxy, which we call here [Formula: see text], such that stable circular orbits are possible only when the constraint [Formula: see text] is satisfied. This is our new result. To approximately quantify the upper limit, we consider as a familiar example our Milky Way galaxy that has a projected dark matter radius R DM ~180 kpc and find that [Formula: see text]. This limit turns out to be about four orders of magnitude larger than the latest data on central density ρ0 arising from the fit to the Navarro–Frenk–White (NFW) and Burkert density profiles. Such consistency indicates that the Eddington-inspired Born–Infeld (EiBI) solution could qualify as yet another viable alternative model for dark matter.


2020 ◽  
Vol 497 (2) ◽  
pp. 2393-2417 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandres Lazar ◽  
James S Bullock ◽  
Michael Boylan-Kolchin ◽  
T K Chan ◽  
Philip F Hopkins ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We analyse the cold dark matter density profiles of 54 galaxy haloes simulated with Feedback In Realistic Environments (FIRE)-2 galaxy formation physics, each resolved within $0.5{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ of the halo virial radius. These haloes contain galaxies with masses that range from ultrafaint dwarfs ($M_\star \simeq 10^{4.5}\, \mathrm{M}_{\odot }$) to the largest spirals ($M_\star \simeq 10^{11}\, \mathrm{M}_{\odot }$) and have density profiles that are both cored and cuspy. We characterize our results using a new, analytic density profile that extends the standard two-parameter Einasto form to allow for a pronounced constant density core in the resolved innermost radius. With one additional core-radius parameter, rc, this three-parameter core-Einasto profile is able to characterize our feedback-impacted dark matter haloes more accurately than other three-parameter profiles proposed in the literature. To enable comparisons with observations, we provide fitting functions for rc and other profile parameters as a function of both M⋆ and M⋆/Mhalo. In agreement with past studies, we find that dark matter core formation is most efficient at the characteristic stellar-to-halo mass ratio M⋆/Mhalo ≃ 5 × 10−3, or $M_{\star } \sim 10^9 \, \mathrm{M}_{\odot }$, with cores that are roughly the size of the galaxy half-light radius, rc ≃ 1−5 kpc. Furthermore, we find no evidence for core formation at radii $\gtrsim 100\ \rm pc$ in galaxies with M⋆/Mhalo < 5 × 10−4 or $M_\star \lesssim 10^6 \, \mathrm{M}_{\odot }$. For Milky Way-size galaxies, baryonic contraction often makes haloes significantly more concentrated and dense at the stellar half-light radius than DMO runs. However, even at the Milky Way scale, FIRE-2 galaxy formation still produces small dark matter cores of ≃ 0.5−2 kpc in size. Recent evidence for a ∼2 kpc core in the Milky Way’s dark matter halo is consistent with this expectation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 415-420
Author(s):  
Klaas S. De Boer

The detection in absorption lines of gas clouds outside the galactic plane at high velocities by Münch and Zirin (1961), high velocities then defined as velocities differing by more than 20 km/s from the LSR, showed that the space outside the Milky-Way disk contains not just stars. Of course, from a continuity argument it had been all along clear that some transition zone had to exist between the dense (relatively speaking) gas of the Milky-Way plane and the vast (almost) emptiness of intergalactic space. The presence of these clouds requires a mechanism to prevent their evaporation, and Spitzer (1956) proposed that dilute hot gas had to exist outside the Milky-Way disk reaching, in his hydrostatic-equilibrium model, temperatures of a few million K at several tens of kpc. These high temperatures led him to name these gases the Galactic Corona. Observational confirmation of the abundance of these cool clouds came from the measurements of 21-cm HI emission, but no one-to-one correspondence with clouds detected in the visual did appear (Habing 1969). For the majority of the high-velocity (HV) clouds (Hulsbosch 1978) no distances are known, and all of those are believed to exist as a gaseous halo with the halo stars. Thus our Milky Way appears to have outside the disk: a halo, a gaseous halo, and a corona.


2018 ◽  
Vol 867 (1) ◽  
pp. 73 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Sokołowska ◽  
A. Babul ◽  
L. Mayer ◽  
S. Shen ◽  
P. Madau
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (S317) ◽  
pp. 306-307
Author(s):  
Kohei Hayashi ◽  
Masashi Chiba

AbstractWe propose a new astrophysical test on the nature of dark matter based on the properties of dark halos associated with dwarf spheroidal galaxies. The method adopts a mean surface density of a dark halo defined within a radius of maximum circular velocity, which is derivable for a wide variety of galaxies with any dark-matter density profiles. We find that even though dark halo density profiles are derived based on the different assumptions for each galaxy sample, this surface density is generally constant across a wide mass range of galaxy. We find that at higher halo-mass scales, this constancy for real galaxies can be naturally reproduced by both cold and warm dark matter (CDM and WDM) models. However, at low-mass scales, for which we have estimated from the Milky Way and Andromeda dwarf satellites, the mean surface density derived from WDM models largely deviates from the observed constancy, whereas CDM models are in reasonable agreement with observations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 500 (4) ◽  
pp. 5589-5602
Author(s):  
Ashadul Halder ◽  
Shibaji Banerjee ◽  
Madhurima Pandey ◽  
Debasish Majumdar

ABSTRACT The mass-to-luminosity ratio of the dwarf satellite galaxies in the Milky Way suggests that these dwarf galaxies may contain substantial dark matter. The dark matter at the dense region such as within or at the vicinity of the centres of these dwarf galaxies may undergo the process of self-annihilation and produce γ-rays as the end product. The satellite borne γ-ray telescope such as Fermi-LAT reported the detection of γ-rays from around 45 Dwarf Spheroidals (dSphs) of Milky Way. In this work, we consider particle dark matter models described in the literature and after studying their phenomenologies, we calculate the γ-ray fluxes from the self-annihilation of the dark matter within the framework of these models in case of each of these 45 dSphs. We then compare the computed results with the observational upper bounds for γ-ray flux reported by Fermi-LAT and Dark Energy Survey for each of the 45 dSphs. The fluxes are calculated by adopting different dark matter density profiles. We then extend similar analysis for the observational upper bounds given by Fermi-LAT for the continuum γ-ray fluxes originating from extragalactic sources.


2020 ◽  
Vol 894 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiang-Er Fang ◽  
Fulai Guo ◽  
Ye-Fei Yuan

2018 ◽  
Vol 862 (1) ◽  
pp. 34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinya Nakashima ◽  
Yoshiyuki Inoue ◽  
Noriko Yamasaki ◽  
Yoshiaki Sofue ◽  
Jun Kataoka ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document