A constant characteristic volume density of dark matter haloes from SPARC rotation curve fits

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Abstract

We study the scaling relations between dark matter (DM) haloes and galaxy discs using 175 galaxies from the SPARC data base. We explore two cosmologically motivated DM halo profiles: the Einasto profile from DM-only simulations and the DC14 profile from hydrodynamic simulations. We fit the observed rotation curves using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo method and break the disc-halo degeneracy using near-infrared photometry and CDM-motivated priors. We find that the characteristic volume density ρs of DM haloes is nearly constant over ∼5 decades in galaxy luminosity. The scale radius rs and the characteristic surface density ρs · rs, instead, correlate with galaxy luminosity. These scaling relations provide an empirical benchmark to cosmological simulations of galaxy formation.

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Li, P., Lelli, F., McGaugh, S. S., Starkman, N., & Schombert, J. M. (2019). A constant characteristic volume density of dark matter haloes from SPARC rotation curve fits. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 482(4), 5106–5124. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty2968

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