97 research outputs found
Voids in the Local Volume: a limit on appearance of a galaxy in a DM halo
Current explanation of the overabundance of dark matter subhalos in the Local
Group (LG) indicates that there maybe a limit on mass of a halo, which can host
a galaxy. This idea can be tested using voids in the distribution of galaxies:
at some level small voids should not contain any (even dwarf) galaxies. We use
observational samples complete to M_B = -12 with distances less than 8 Mpc to
construct the void function (VF): the distribution of sizes of voids empty of
any galaxies. There are ~30 voids with sizes ranging from 1 to 5 Mpc. We then
study the distribution of dark matter halos in very high resolution simulations
of the LCDM model. The theoretical VF matches the observations remarkably well
only if we use halos with circular velocities larger than 45 +/- 10 km/s. This
agrees with the Local Group predictions. There are smaller halos in the voids,
but they should not produce any luminous matter. Small voids look quite similar
to their giant cousins: the density has a minimum at the center of a void and
it increases as we get closer to the border. Small nonluminous halos inside the
void form a web of tiny filaments. Thus, both the Local Group data and the
nearby voids indicate that isolated halos below 45 +/- 10 km/s must not host
galaxies and that small (few Mpc) voids are truly dark.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
TWO-POINT ANGULAR CORRELATION FUNCTION FOR THE GREEN BANK 4.85 GHZ SKY SURVEY
This paper presents an angular correlation analysis of the Green Bank 4.85
GHz radio catalog (Gregory \& Condon 1991) of 54,579 sources (S \gsim 25 mJy).
The Green Bank catalog is found to be complete to S 35 mJy over
20, 0, and Galactic
latitude . The 2-point angular correlation function shows
evidence for the clustering of radio sources, with a power-law distribution
consistent with a slope . This may well provide the
detection of an angular correlation in a large area, complete deep radio
survey.Comment: 14 pages, compressed, uuencoded postscript. Plots and text: anonymous
ftp://charon.nmsu.edu/pub/PAPERS/aklypin, apj.uu and apjfigs.u
The tumultuous lives of galactic dwarfs and the missing satellites problem
Hierarchical Cold Dark Matter (CDM) models predict that Milky Way (MW) sized
halos contain hundreds of dense low-mass dark satellites, an order of magnitude
more than the number of observed satellites in the Local Group (LG). If the CDM
paradigm is correct, we need to understand why most of these halos failed to
form stars and become galaxies. We analyze the dynamical evolution of the
satellite halos in a high-resolution cosmological simulation of MW sized halos
in the LCDM cosmology. We find that about 10% of the substructure halos with
the present masses <10^8-10^9 Msun (circular velocities Vmax<30 km/s) had
considerably larger masses and circular velocities when they formed at
redshifts z>2. After the initial period of mass accretion in isolation, these
objects experience dramatic mass loss due to tidal stripping, in some cases
even before they are accreted by their host halo. This can explain how the
smallest dwarf spheroidal galaxies of the LG were able to build up a sizable
stellar mass in their seemingly shallow potential wells. We propose a new model
in which all of the luminous dwarf spheroidals in the Local Group are
descendants of the relatively massive (>10^9 Msun) high-redshift systems, in
which the gas could cool efficiently by atomic line emission and which were not
significantly affected by the extragalactic ultraviolet radiation. We present a
simple galaxy formation model based on the trajectories extracted from the
simulation, which accounts for the bursts of star formation after strong tidal
shocks and the inefficiency of gas cooling in halos with virial temperatures
Tvir<~10^4 K. Our model reproduces the abundance, spatial distribution, and
morphological segregation of the observed Galactic satellites. The results are
insensitive to the redshift of reionization.Comment: To appear in July 10, 2004 issue of ApJ, 16 pages, 10 figures, uses
emulateapj5. This version matches the version in pres
How far do they go? The outer structure of dark matter halos
We study the density profiles of collapsed galaxy-size dark matter halos with
masses 1e11-5e12 Msun focusing mostly on the halo outer regions from the formal
virial radius Rvir up to 5-7Rvir. We find that isolated halos in this mass
range extend well beyond Rvir exhibiting all properties of virialized objects
up to 2-3Rvir: relatively smooth density profiles and no systematic infall
velocities. The dark matter halos in this mass range do not grow as one naively
may expect through a steady accretion of satellites, i.e., on average there is
no mass infall. This is strikingly different from more massive halos, which
have large infall velocities outside of the virial radius. We provide accurate
fit for the density profile of these galaxy-size halos. For a wide range
(0.01-2)Rvir of radii the halo density profiles are fit with the approximation
rho=rho_s exp(-2n[x^{1/n}-1])+rho_m, where x=r/r_s, rho_m is the mean matter
density of the Universe, and the index n is in the range n=6-7.5. These
profiles do not show a sudden change of behavior beyond the virial radius. For
larger radii we combine the statistics of the initial fluctuations with the
spherical collapse model to obtain predictions for the mean and most probable
density profiles for halos of several masses. The model give excellent results
beyond 2-3 formal virial radii.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Ap
Response of dark matter halos to condensation of baryons: cosmological simulations and improved adiabatic contraction model
The cooling of gas in the centers of dark matter halos is expected to lead to
a more concentrated dark matter distribution. The response of dark matter to
the condensation of baryons is usually calculated using the model of adiabatic
contraction, which assumes spherical symmetry and circular orbits. In contrast,
halos in the hierarchical structure formation scenarios grow via multiple
violent mergers and accretion along filaments, and particle orbits in the halos
are highly eccentric. We study the effects of the cooling of gas in the inner
regions of halos using high-resolution cosmological simulations which include
gas dynamics, radiative cooling, and star formation. We find that the
dissipation of gas indeed increases the density of dark matter and steepens its
radial profile in the inner regions of halos compared to the case without
cooling. For the first time, we test the adiabatic contraction model in
cosmological simulations and find that the standard model systematically
overpredicts the increase of dark matter density in the inner 5% of the virial
radius. We show that the model can be improved by a simple modification of the
assumed invariant from M(r)r to M(r_av)r, where r and r_av are the current and
orbit-averaged particle positions. This modification approximately accounts for
orbital eccentricities of particles and reproduces simulation profiles to
within 10-20%. We present analytical fitting functions that accurately describe
the transformation of the dark matter profile in the modified model and can be
used for interpretation of observations.Comment: 12 page
- âŠ