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1 There is a very important component that cannot be seen at all How do we know it is there ? Almost all galaxies have a dark halo.... in other spirals,

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Presentation on theme: "1 There is a very important component that cannot be seen at all How do we know it is there ? Almost all galaxies have a dark halo.... in other spirals,"— Presentation transcript:

1 1 There is a very important component that cannot be seen at all How do we know it is there ? Almost all galaxies have a dark halo.... in other spirals, we see its gravitational effect on their rotation curves... For example Rotation at large radii is much faster than can be understood from the gravitational field of the stars and gas alone. the dark halo

2 2 Dark Matter in Galaxies We believe that galaxies formed through a hierarchy of merging. The merging elements were a mixture of baryonic and dark matter. The dark matter settled into a partially virialized spheroidal halo while the baryons (in disk galaxies) settled into a rotating disk and bulge What can we learn about the properties of dark halos ? Do the properties of dark halos predicted by simulations correspond to what is inferred from observational studies ?

3 3 Rotation of the Galaxy: Merrifield (1992)

4 4 M(R)   R is not what we would expect for a gravitating system of stars : we would expect the Keplerian M(R)   R 1/2 Is this evidence for a dark halo ? Not necessarily : it depends on how far the rotation curve extends. Most spirals have a light distribution that is roughly exponential: I(R) = I o exp (- R / h) (for a large galaxy like the Milky Way, the scale length h ≈ 3-4 kpc) V(R) flat  the enclosed mass M(R)   R

5 5 Optical rotation curves, measured from the spectra of ionized gas, typically extend to R ≈ 3 h Now assume that the surface density distribution of stars in our disk galaxy follows the optical surface brightness distribution. Can this surface density distribution, with its gravitational potential  (R) explain the observed rotation curve V(R) ? The answer to this question is yes and no

6 6 Yes, for optical rotation curves extending out to about 3 disk scale lengths: In the next slide, the points are the observations and the curve is the expected rotation curve Despite the very different shapes of the two rotation curves, the light distribution can explain the observed optical rotation curves out to about 3 scale lengths Optical rotation curves out to ~ 3 scale lengths do not tell us very much about dark matter in spirals

7 7 Two very different rotation curves. The points are the rotation data and the curves are as expected if mass follows light. The only scaling is through the adopted M/L ratio

8 8 No for galaxies with 21 cm HI rotation curves that extend far out, to R >> 3 h. Begeman 1987 eg maximum disk decomposition for NGC 3198: M/L B = 3.8 for disk observed

9 9 For NGC 3198 the HI rotation curve extends out to 11 h. (for some galaxies the rotation data go to more than 20 h) The expected V(R) from stars and gas falls well below the observed rotation curve in the outer region of the galaxy. This is seen for almost all spirals with rotation curves that extend out to many scale lengths. We conclude that the luminous matter dominates the radial protential gradient ∂  ∂R for R < 3h but beyond this radius the dark halo becomes progressively more important.

10 10 Typically, out to the radius where the HI data ends, the ratio of dark to luminous mass is 3 to 5: values up to about 10 are found in a few examples. This is a lower limit on the ratio of (total dark mass) to luminous mass

11 11 For the decomposition of NGC 3198, the stellar M/L ratio was taken to be as large as possible without leading to a hollow dark halo - this is a maximum disk (minimum halo) decomposition. Many galaxies have been analysed in this way - the decomposition often works out as for NGC 3198, with comparable peak circular velocity contributions from disk and dark halo Some people believe that maximum disk decompositions are not correct

12 12 The maximum disk question is important for us here, because inferences about the properties of dark halos from rotation curves depend so much on the correctness of the maximum disk interpretation. eg if the maximum disk decompositions are correct, then the dark halos have approximately uniform density cores which are much larger than the scale length of the disk

13 13 halo

14 14 In contrast, the halos that form in cosmological simulations have steeply cusped inner halos with   r -1 or even steeper near the center

15 15 Optical rotation curves favor the maximum disk interpretation. In the inner regions of the disks of larger spirals, the rotation curves are well fit by assuming that mass follows light. eg Buchhorn (1991) analysed 552 galaxies with optical V(R) and I-band surface photometry, and a wide range of rotation curve morphology. He was able to match the rotation curves well for 97% of his sample, with realistic M/L ratios (including the kinks and bumps as in the right panel)

16 16 The implication is that either the stellar disk dominates the gravitational field in the inner parts of the disk (R < 3h) or the potential gradient of the halo faithfully mimics the potential gradient of the disk in almost every spiral, which seems very unlikely stop

17 17 How to model the dark halo The goal is to estimate typical parameters for dark halos (density, scale length, velocity dispersion, shape) to compare with halo properties from simulations Since about 1985, observers have used model dark halos with constant density cores to interpret rotation curves Carignan & Freeman (1985) made the first rotation curve decomposition into contributions from the stellar disk, gas and dark halo. We used the real non-singular isothermal sphere (computed from Poisson's equation) to model the dark halo. It has a flat core, a well defined core radius and central density, and has  r -2 at large radius, so V(r) ~ constant, as is usually observed.

18 18 V(R) R A simple analytic form is the pseudo-isothermal sphere  o {1 + (r / r c ) 2 } -1 which again has a flat core, a well defined core radius and central density, and has  ~ r - 2 at large radius. Although they have similar asymptotic behaviour, the rotation curves of the real and pseudo isothermal models are different and will give different halo parameters when used inrotation curve decompositions real pseudo

19 19 Using the pseudo isothermal model for the dark halo of large galaxies like the Milky Way, we find that  o ~ 0.01 M  pc -3 and r c ~ 10 kpc (for comparison, the stellar density of ourGalaxy near the sun is about 0. 1 M  pc -3 ) We will see later that the values of  o and r c depend strongly on the luminosity of the galaxy.

20 20 Another model with a flat core that is sometimes used in rotation curve decompositions is Burkert's (1995) model  (r) =  B (1 + r/r B ) -1 {1 + (r/r B ) 2 } -1 Its  (r) ~ r -3 at large r, like the NFW model (later)

21 21 These models have flat central cores : why were they used ? I think it was because rotation curves of spirals do appear to have an inner solid-body component which indicates a core of roughly constant density hot stellar systems like globular clusters were successfully modelled by King models, which are modified isothermal spheres with flat central cores V R NGC 6822

22 22 On the other hand.... CDM simulations consistently produce halos that are cusped at the center. This has been known since the 1980’s, and has been popularized by Navarro et al 1996 with the NFW density distribution which parameterizes the CDM halos        (r / r s ) - 1 {1 + (r/r s )} - 2 These are cusped at the center, with   r - 1

23 23 We have suffered a long controversy over the last decade about whether the rotation curves imply cusped or cored dark halos. This continues to be very illuminating Galaxies of low surface brightness are important in this debate. The normal or high surface brightness spirals have a fairly well defined characteristic surface brightness scale (central surface brightness around 21.5 B mag arcsec -2 ) In the LSB galaxies the disk density can be more than 10 x lower than in the normal spirals. These LSB disks are fairly clearly sub-maximal and the rotation curve is dominated everywhere by the dark halo.

24 24. The observational problem is to determine the shape of the rotation curve near the center of the galaxies - a cored halo gives a solid body rotation curve near the center, while a cusped halo has a steep slope at small r Observationally it is not easy to tell. HI rotation curves have limited spatial resolution so the beam smearing can mask the effects of a possible cusp. 2D optical rotation data (Fabry-Perot) have much better resolution - current data favor a cored halo. Example of NGC 6822, a Local Group LSB galaxy

25 25 Local Group LSB galaxy in near-IR. HI map has 20 pc resolution NGC 6822

26 26 High spatial resolution HI observations of Local Group LSB galaxy NGC 6822 Weldrake et al 2002 pseudo isothermal halo min diskmin disk + gas SPS M/Lmax disk a real isothermal would be better

27 27 High spatial resolution HI observations of Local Group LSB galaxy NGC 6822 NFW halo Weldrake et al 2002 Not as good as the isothermal

28 28 Distribution of inner slope of density  ~ r   Sample of about 60 LSB galaxies optical rotation curves give inner slope of density distribution NFW halos have  = -1 Flat cores have  = 0 de Blok et al 2002 NFW

29 29 How large and massive are the dark halos of large spirals like the Milky Way ? Flat rotation curves => M(r) ~ r, like the isothermal sphere :  ~ r -2 This cannot go on for ever - the halo mass would be infinite. Halos must have a finite extent and mass, and their density distribution must truncate or be steeper than  ~ r -3 at very large r. eg NFW with        (r / r s ) - 1 {1 + (r/r s )} - 2 has  ~ r -3 at large r.

30 30 Tracers of dark matter in the Galaxy (rotation curve to ~ 20 kpc, kinematics of metal poor stars, globular clusters and satellites out to ~ 50 kpc) indicate that the halo mass M(r) = r(kpc) x 10 10 solar masses. Again, this is what we expect if  ~ r -2 ie the rotation curve stays approximately flat at 220 km/s out to 50 kpc. How large are dark halos - how far in radius do they extend ?

31 31 M31 (Andromeda) is now approaching the Galaxy at 118 km s -1. Its distance is about 750 kpc. Assuming their initial separation was small and the age of the universe is say 18 Gyr, we can estimate a lower limit on the total mass of the Andromeda + Galaxy system. The Galaxy’s share of this mass is (13  2) x 10 11 solar masses. A similar argument using the Leo I dwarf at a distance of about 230 kpc gives (12  2) x 10 11 solar masses. Timing argument

32 32 The relation for the mass of the galactic halo M(r) = r (kpc) x 10 10 solar masses out to r ~ 50 kpc then indicates that the dark halo extends out beyond r = 120 kpc if the rotation curve remains flat ie if  (r) ~ r -2 and possibly much further than 120 kpc if the density distribution declines more rapidly at large radius

33 33 This radius is much larger than the extent of any directly measured rotation curves, so this “timing argument” gives a realistic lower limit on the total mass of the dark halo. For our Galaxy, the luminous mass (disk + bulge) is about 6 x 10 10 solar masses The luminosity is about 2 x 10 10 solar luminosities The ratio of total dark mass to stellar mass is then at least 120/6 = 20 and the total M/L ratio is at least 60

34 34 Satellites of disk galaxies can also be used to estimate the total mass and extent of the dark halos of other bright spirals Individual galaxies have only a few observable satellites each, but we can make a super-system by combining observations of many satellite systems and so get a measure of the mass of a typical dark halo. eg Prada et al (2003) looked at the kinematics of about 3000 satellites around about 1000 galaxies

35 35 With a careful treatment of interlopers, they find that the velocity dispersion of the super-satellite-system decreases slowly with radius The halos typically extend out to about 300 kpc but the density distribution at large radius is steeper than the isothermal:  (r) ~ r -3, like most cosmological models including NFW The total M/L ratios are typically 100-150, compared with the lower limit from the timing argument of 60 for our Galaxy. (The Prada galaxies are bright systems, comparable to the Galaxy)

36 36 Prada et al 2003 Velocities |  V| of 3000 satellites relative to their parent galaxy error bars show the velocity dispersion decreasing with radius out to ~ 300 kpc !

37 37 Wilkinson & Evans (1999) used motions of 27 globular clusters and satellites : made a dynamical model of the halo and estimated the total mass to be M total = 1.9 +3.6 - 1.7 x 10 12 M  or M(50) = 5.4 +0.2 - 3.6 x 10 11 M  out to 50 kpc consistent again with M(r) = r (kpc) x 10 10 M  Back to the mass of the Galaxy....

38 38 For comparison, from least action arguments, the likely mass of the local group is 4-8 x 10 12 M  ( Peebles 1996, Schmoldt & Saha 1998) Within the uncertainties, most of the mass in the Local Group could be in the two large spirals M31 has a similar rotation amplitude so its total mass may be similar to the total mass of the Galaxy. Evans & Wilkinson (2000) used satellites and GCs in M31 to derive a lower mass of 1.2 +3.6 -1.7 x 10 12 M  for M31 - similar to the Galaxy, within the uncertainties So the total mass of MW + M31 ~ 3 x 10 12 M 

39 39 Timing M31-MW (eg Zaritsky 1999 ) gives 3-4 x 10 12 M  for MW and M31 together, ignoring tranverse motions and growth of halo with time and overlap of halos at early times (all of these would increase the mass) Least action arguments like Schmoldt & Saha use more galaxies and give similar result Kochanek (1996) put together timing, velocity dispersion and escape velocity arguments and derived M(200kpc) = 0.5-2 x 10 12 M  Zaritsky concludes that the data are consistent with an isothermal halo with V c ~ 180-220 km/s, extending out to about 200 kpc, with M > 10 12 M  - see fig on next slide

40 40 Zaritsky 1999 all more or less consistent with M(r) = r (kpc) x 10 10 M  out to about 200 kpc

41 41 More recent estimates give similar MW halo properties Sakamoto et al 2003: 11 satellites, 137 GCs and 413 HB stars out to 10 kpc from the sun. To keep these objects bound in a flat rotation curve potential, the mass is about (2 +0.5 -1.0 ) x 10 12 M . Out to 50 kpc, M = 5.5 x 10 11 M  (This is a widely agreed number) Battaglia et al 2005: 240 halo objects with distances and radial velocities: satellites, GCs, HB stars, halo giants (spaghetti) to derive the  (r) relation. The  (r) is constant at 120 km/s out to 30 kpc, then drops to 50 km/s at 120 kpc. Adopting the tracer density distribution  (r) ~ r -3.5, the halo mass is (1.2 +1.8 -0.5 ) x 10 12 M  on a scale of ~ 120 kpc

42 42 Battaglia et al 2005 Halo tracers  (r)  (r)

43 43 Battaglia et al 2005 Best fit: truncated flat rotation curve halo M ~ 1.2 x 10 12 M  : constant anisotropy, scale ~ 120 kpc

44 44 Dehnen (2006) argued that the Battaglia tracers are consistent with a non-truncated isothermal halo if the tracer population truncates at r ~ 160 kpc, again assuming constant anisotropy. Finds a similar mass to Battaglia's. A non-kinematical estimate: Bellazini (2004) used tidal radii of outer GC in the Galaxy to derive the total mass: finds (1.3 +2.9 -1.0 ) x 10 12 M  out to 90 kpc Agrees well with kinematical estimates

45 45 Conclusion The total mass of the Milky Way is ~ 1.5 x 10 12 M  The MW is one of the few galaxies for which we have an estimate of the total mass, rather than just the mass out to the end of a rotation curve. The stellar mass is about 6 x 10 10 M  So the stellar baryons are only about 4% of the total mass Compare this with the universal  baryon /  matter = 15%

46 46 Dark halo of M31 Little recent work on rotation curves of M31 and M33 Large spiral with prominent bulge.

47 47 Carignan et al 2006 (HI : GBT & Effelsberg) Out to 35 kpc, M * = 2.3 x 10 11 M , M halo = 1.1 x 10 11 M , so stellar mass dominates. M(35 kpc) = 3.4 x 10 11 M  : compare with Milky Way M(50 kpc) = 5 x 10 11 M 

48 48 Evans & Wilkinson (2000) used satellites and GCs in M31 to derive a lower limit on the mass of 1.2 +3.6 -1.7 x 10 12 M  for M31 - similar to the Galaxy, within the uncertainties

49 49 Dark halo of M33 Almost pure disk galaxy, normal surface brightness

50 50 gas disk halo Corbelli & Salucci 2000 M halo > 5 x 10 10 M , M halo / M bar = 5 out to R = 15 kpc V(R) to 13 scale lengths Halo dominates for R > 3 kpc ≈ 3 scale lengths

51 51 Dwarf spheroidal galaxies Faint satellites of our Galaxy M V down to -8 Very low surface brightness Total masses ~ 10 7 solar masses Radial velocities of individual stars in several of these dSph galaxies show that their M/L ratios can be very high: the fainter ones have M/L ratios > 100

52 52 Velocity dispersion of the Fornax dSph galaxy - approximately constant with radius (Mateo 1997). Fornax is the brightest of the galactic dSph galaxies: its M/L V  10 (expect M/L V = 2 from its stellar content alone) expected for constant M/L

53 53 M/L ratios for dSph galaxies. Some have M/L > 100. The curve is for a luminous component with M/L = 5 plus a halo with M = 2.5 x 10 7 M . Mateo 1997

54 54 The lack of tidal extensions in Dra, Sex, Scl and UMi found by many authors supports the view that the dSph galaxies are immersed in large extended dark halos with masses ~ 10 9 M . Growing evidence that these systems have flat dark matter cores - eg Goertz et al (2006) argument about survival of the globular clusters near center of the Fornax dSph against dynamical friction

55 55 Wilkinson et al (2004) :  (R) for Dra, UMi Falling  at edge is probably associated with the edge of the stellar distribution. A steep gradient in the tracer density goes with a fall in velocity dispersion. This does not mean that the edge of the halo has been reached

56 56 Stellar surface density profile for Draco (Segall et al 2006) Steep gradient where velocity dispersion falls

57 57 Kravtsov et al (2004) : why don't most of the subhalos have stars ? In their simulations, find that about 10% of halos that are small now (V c < 30 km/s) were much larger at z > 2, but suffer tidal stripping in the hierarchical merging process. Propose that the MW dSph formed in such objects with M > 10 9 M , so were able to build up some stellar mass and survive reionization despite their present shallow potential wells Kazantzidis et al (2004) on same problem : match the  (r) profiles for tidally stripped subhalos to observed  (r) for Draco and Fornax. Find that the V c values for Fornax and Draco are around 20-35 km/s now. (These are somewhat larger than suggested by the velocity dispersions alone). More on evolution of subhalos and dSph galaxies

58 58 Taffoni et al (2003) : looked at interplay of dynamical friction and tidal mass loss on subhalo evolution. * Massive subhalos (~ 0.1 M parent ) merge with host. * Intermediate mass satellites (~ 0.02 M parent ) lose mass tidally, reduced to 1-10% of initial mass, but mostly survive. * lower mass subhalos are not much affected Surviving remnants have masses ~ 0.001 M parent after a Hubble time

59 59 Taffoni et al 2003 Evolution of sub-halos: dynamical friction and tidal mass loss Intermediate mass subhalos survive More massive subhalos perish

60 60 Hayashi et al (2003): looked at the tidal evolution of sub-halos as they lose mass tidally and are tidally heated. Match the tidally stripped systems to surface brightness profiles and velocity dispersions of Carina and Draco dSph galaxies. Argue that peak circular velocities of the dSph halos are much higher than expected from the stellar velocity dispersions. The true tidal radii are much larger than those given by star counts, which are just some feature of the stellar distribution. eg Carina has a velocity dispersion of 7 km/s, and its halo has a peak V c ~ 55 km/s : its true tidal radius is about 20 times larger than the apparent stellar tidal radius. In their picture, only sub-halos with V c < 35 km/s lack visible counterparts.

61 61 Hayashi 2003 apparent r t from stellar distribution true r t before stripping after stripping

62 62 Flaring of HI layer in the Galaxy: The HI layer has an approximately isothermal velocity dispersion (~ 8 km s -1 ). In a spherical dark halo, the outer HI layer will flare vertically more than in a flattened dark halo. For the Galaxy, Olling & Merrifield (2000) find that the axial ratio q  0.8 from the flaring of the HI layer. HI flaring is a powerful technique - it provides a measure of ∂  /∂z to combine with ∂  /∂z from rotation data. Can potentially sort out the maximum disk controversy because ∂  /∂z near the plane comes mainly from the stellar disk in the inner Galaxy. HI flaring will be used more in future as good high resolution HI data comes in for edge-on galaxies.

63 63 Olling & Merrifield 2000 Flaring of the Galactic HI layer gives constraint on flattening of the dark halo

64 64 Final slide: how much galactic dark matter is there ? Current estimate of  matter = 0.3, so galactic dark matter is about 10 to 30% of the total matter content of the Universe  stars + cold gas  0.004  BBNS  0.04 so luminous mass in galaxies is about 10% of the expected baryon mass - rest currently believed to be hot gas somewhere If (luminous/dark) mass ratio in galaxies is 10 to 20, then  dark halos  0.03 to 0.06, fairly similar to the baryon  BBNS Weak lensing estimate of ~ 0.11 (Hoekstra 2003 ? )


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