Further evidence for large central mass-to-light ratios in massive early-type galaxies

0Citations
Citations of this article
9Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

We studied the stellar populations, distribution of dark matter, and dynamical structure of a sample of 25 early-type galaxies in the Coma and Abell∼262 clusters. We derived dynamical mass-to-light ratios and dark matter densities from orbit-based dynamical models, complemented by the ages, metallicities, and α-element abundances of the galaxies from single stellar population models. Most of the galaxies have a significant detection of dark matter and their halos are about 10 times denser than in spirals of the same stellar mass. Calibrating dark matter densities to cosmological simulations we find assembly redshifts z DM ≈ 1-3. The dynamical mass that follows the light is larger than expected for a Kroupa stellar initial mass function, especially in galaxies with high velocity dispersion σeff inside the effective radius r eff. We now have 5 of 25 galaxies where mass follows light to 1-3 r eff, the dynamical mass-to-light ratio of all the mass that follows the light is large (≈ 8-10 in the Kron-Cousins R band), the dark matter fraction is negligible to 1-3 r eff. This could indicate a 'massive' initial mass function in massive early-type galaxies. Alternatively, some of the dark matter in massive galaxies could follow the light very closely suggesting a significant degeneracy between luminous and dark matter. © 2013 International Astronomical Union.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Corsini, E. M., Wegner, G. A., Thomas, J., Saglia, R. P., Bender, R., & Pu, S. B. (2012). Further evidence for large central mass-to-light ratios in massive early-type galaxies. In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 8, pp. 225–228). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921313004833

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free