1–4 Sept 2025
Buenos Aires
America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires timezone

Dark Matter Halos in Milky Way-like Galaxies: An Evidence for a Universal Density Profile

Not scheduled
20m
Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires

Sociedad Cientifica Argentina - Av. Sta. Fe 1145, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Speaker

Maria Clara Cavalcante Siviero (Brazilian Center for Research in Physics)

Description

For nearly five decades, the interplay between dark matter (DM) halos and baryonic matter has shaped our understanding of galaxy formation and evolution. The galaxy-halo connection is an important tool to better understand the DM distribution in more local scales, where its gravitational imprint is more directly observable. In this work we combine cosmological simulations with multi-wavelength observations to constrain DM profiles of galaxies similar to the Milky Way (MW). The structure, extension, and mass of the MW still hold observational challenges due to the fact of globally analyzing the system in which we are located. The study of MW analogs helps us with this challenge. We analyze a large sample of $>$100 galaxies from the state-of-the-art Illustris TNG-50 cosmological simulation, combined with 21 cm line observations of nearby MW analogs. Using both spatial and spectral high-resolution data from VLA and GMRT radio telescope arrays, we employ the 3D-Barolo algorithm to derive precise kinematic maps and rotation curves. We use Spitzer mid-IR imaging at 3.6/4.5 \textmu m, the best single-band tracer of stellar mass, to perform a careful analysis of the baryonic component--strongly dominated by the emission from low-mass stars. We decompose the rotation curves into their different mass components (stars, gas, and DM), enabling the construction of a DM radial profile for each galaxy. By using a MCMC-based routine, we account for the DM contribution for the observed rotation curves. This allows us to test the universality of DM halo shapes and its possible deviations when taking baryonic physics into account. With the DM density profiles in hand, we constrain the DM density in the solar neighborhood of the MW, based on drawing analogies with the DM distribution in our MW analog sample. In general, current values in the literature rely on the study of stellar orbits in the solar neighborhood or under assumptions about the shape of the DM halo in the MW. Instead, we calculate the DM density at the corresponding location of the solar neighborhood in each of the analog galaxies. Our analysis yields an average local DM density of $\rho_{DM}~\sim0.01~M_{\odot}~pc^{-3}$ for the sample of simulated galaxies--consistent with the rotation curve results based on HI observations. This provides a critical link to direct DM detection experiments on Earth, as the local DM density is a key parameter for estimating expected interaction rates with DM particles. Such a result contributes to sharpening both the empirical basis for DM searches and our understanding of its role in galactic environments.

Authors

Prof. Karín Menéndez Delmestre (Valongo Observatory (OV/UFRJ)) Maria Clara Cavalcante Siviero (Brazilian Center for Research in Physics)

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