1,633 research outputs found
Dark baryons and rotation curves
The best measured rotation curve for any galaxy is that of the dwarf
spiralXXXX DDO 154, which extends out to about 20 disk scale lengths. It
provides an ideal laboratory for testing the universal density profile
prediction from high resolution numerical simulations of hierarchical
clustering in cold dark matter dominated cosmological models. We find that the
observed rotation curve cannot be fit either at small radii, as previously
noted, or at large radii. We advocate a resolution of this dilemma by
postulating the existence of a dark spheroid of baryons amounting to several
times the mass of the observed disk component and comparable to that of the
cold dark matter halo component. Such an additional mass component provides an
excellent fit to the rotation curve provided that the outer halo is still cold
dark matter-dominated with a density profile and mass-radius scaling relation
as predicted by standard CDM-dominated models. The universal existence of such
dark baryonic spheroidal components provides a natural explanation of the
universal rotation curves observed in spiral galaxies, may have a similar
origin and composition to the local counterpart that has been detected as
MACHOs in our own galactic halo via gravitational microlensing, and is
consistent with, and even motivated by, primordial nucleosynthesis estimates of
the baryon fraction.Comment: 16 pages LaTeX, 2 postscript figures. To be published in The
  Astrophysical Journal, Letter
The Baryonic Mass Function of Spiral Galaxies: Clues to Galaxy Formation
We compute the baryonic mass function (BMF) of disc galaxies using the best
LFs and baryonic M/L ratios reliable for this goal. For baryonic masses (M_b)
ranging between 10^8 and 10^{11} solar masses, the BMF is featureless, i.e. it
scales as M_b^{-1/2}. Outside this mass range, the BMF is a strong inverse
function of M_b. The contributions to the baryon density Omega_b from objects
of different mass highlight a characteristic mass scale of spirals at about
2x10^{11} solar masses, around which >50% of the total baryonic mass is
concentrated. The integral value, Omega_b= 1.4x10^{-3}, confirms, to a higher
accuracy, previous evidence (Persic & Salucci 1992) that the fraction of BBN
baryons locked in disc galaxies is negligible and matches that of high-z Damped
Lyman Alpha systems (DLAs). We investigate the scenario where DLAs are the
progenitors of present-day spirals, and find a simple relationship between
their masses and HI column densities by which the DLA mass function closely
matches the spiral BMF.Comment: MNRAS, in press. Replaces previous, unrefereed version. 10 pages
  MNRAS style LaTeX, 7 figure
Comment on "Scalar-tensor gravity coupled to a global monopole and flat rotation curves" by Lee and Lee
The recent paper by Lee and Lee (2004) may strongly leave the impression that
astronomers have established that the rotation curves of spiral galaxies are
flat. We show that the old paradigm of Flat Rotation Curves lacks, today, any
observational support and following it at face value leads to intrinsically
flawed alternatives to the Standard Dark Matter Scenario. On the other side, we
claim that the rich systematics of spiral galaxy rotation curves, that reveals,
in the standard Newtonian Gravity framework, the phenomenon of dark matter, in
alternative scenarios, works as a unique benchmark.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, accepted in Phys. Rev. 
Dark Matter Scaling Relations
We establish the presence of a dark matter core radius, for the first time in
a very large number of spiral galaxies of all luminosities. Contrary to common
opinion we find that the sizes of these cores and the " DM core problem" are
bigger for more massive spirals. As a result the Burkert profile provides an
excellent mass model for dark halos around disk galaxies. Moreover, we find
that the spiral dark matter core densities  and core radii 
lie in the same scaling relation  of dwarf galaxies with core radii upto ten times more
smaller.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for Publication in Apj Let
A STIS Survey for OVI Absorption Systems at 0.12 < z < 0.5 I.: The Statistical Properties of Ionized Gas
We have conducted a systematic survey for intervening OVI absorbers in
available echelle spectra of 16 QSOs at z_QSO = 0.17-0.57. These spectra were
obtained using HST/STIS with the E140M grating. Our search uncovered a total of
27 foreground OVI absorbers with rest-frame absorption equivalent width
W_r(1031) > 25mA. Ten of these QSOs exhibit strong OVI absorbers in their
vicinity. Our OVI survey does not require the known presence of Lya, and the
echelle resolution allows us to identify the OVI absorption doublet based on
their common line centroid and known flux ratio. We estimate the total redshift
survey path, \Delta z, using a series of Monte-Carlo simulations, and find that
\Delta z=1.66, 2.18, and 2.42 for absorbers of strength W_r = 30, 50 and 80mA,
respectively, leading to a number density of dN(W > 50mA)/dz = 6.7 +/- 1.7 and
dN(W > 30mA)/dz = 10.4 +/- 2.2. In contrast, we also measure dN/dz = 27 +/- 9
for OVI absorbers of W_r > 50mA at |\Delta v|< 5000 kms from the background
QSOs. Using the random sample of OVI absorbers with well characterized survey
completeness, we estimate a mean cosmological mass density of the OVI gas
\Omega(OVI)h = 1.7 +/- 0.3 x 10^-7. In addition, we show that <5% of OVI
absorbers originate in underdense regions that do not show a significant trace
of HI. Furthermore, we show that the neutral gas column N(HI) associated with
these OVI absorbers spans nearly five orders of magnitude, and show moderate
correlation with N(OVI). Finally, while the number density of OVI absorbers
varies substantially from one sightline to another, it also appears to be
inversely correlated with the number density of HI absorbers along individual
lines of sight.Comment: 12 pages. ApJ accepte
Cosmic-Ray Proton to Electron Ratios
A basic quantity in the characterization of relativistic particles is the
proton-to-electron (p/e) energy density ratio. We derive a simple approximate
expression suitable to estimate this quantity, U_p/U_e = (m_p/m_e)^(3-q)/2,
valid when a nonthermal `gas' of these particles is electrically neutral and
the particles' power-law spectral indices are equal -- e.g., at injection. This
relation partners the well-known p/e number density ratio at 1 GeV, i.e.
N_p/N_e = (m_p/m_e)^{(q-1)/2}.Comment: 4 pages; to be published in Proc. of MGM13 (13th Marcel Grossmann
  Meeting -- Stockholm July 1-7, 2012
Galactic rotation curves in modified gravity with non-minimal coupling between matter and geometry
We investigate the possibility that the behavior of the rotational velocities
of test particles gravitating around galaxies can be explained in the framework
of modified gravity models with non-minimal matter-geometry coupling.
Generally, the dynamics of test particles around galaxies, as well as the
corresponding mass deficit, is explained by postulating the existence of dark
matter. The extra-terms in the gravitational field equations with
geometry-matter coupling modify the equations of motion of test particles, and
induce a supplementary gravitational interaction. Starting from the variational
principle describing the particle motion in the presence of the non-minimal
coupling, the expression of the tangential velocity of a test particle, moving
in the vacuum on a stable circular orbit in a spherically symmetric geometry,
is derived. The tangential velocity depends on the metric tensor components, as
well as of the coupling function between matter and geometry. The Doppler
velocity shifts are also obtained in terms of the coupling function. If the
tangential velocity profile is known, the coupling term between matter and
geometry can be obtained explicitly in an analytical form. The functional form
of this function is obtained in two cases, for a constant tangential velocity,
and for an empirical velocity profile obtained from astronomical observations,
respectively. Therefore, these results open the possibility of directly testing
the modified gravity models with non-minimal coupling between matter and
geometry by using direct astronomical and astrophysical observations at the
galactic or extra-galactic scale.Comment: 8 pages, accepted for publication in PR
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