4.7 Article

The response of dark matter haloes to gas ejection: CuspCore II

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 518, Issue 4, Pages 5356-5375

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac3233

Keywords

ISM: jets and outflows; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: haloes; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; dark matter

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We propose an analytic model, CuspCore II, to explain the response of dark matter haloes to central gas ejection, which can generate DM-deficient cores in dwarfs and high-z massive galaxies. The model is physically justified and provides more accurate predictions than its previous version, CuspCore I. By iteratively tracing the energy diffusion dE = dU (r), the model can reproduce the simulated DM profiles with around 10% accuracy or better.
We propose an analytic model, CuspCore II, for the response of dark matter (DM) haloes to central gas ejection, as a mechanism for generating DM-deficient cores in dwarfs and high-z massive galaxies. We test this model and three other methods using idealized N-body simulations. The current model is physically justified and provides more accurate predictions than the earlier version, CuspCore I (Freundlich et al. ). The CuspCore model assumes an instantaneous change of potential, followed by a relaxation to a new Jeans equilibrium. The relaxation turns out to be violent relaxation during the first orbital period, followed by phase mixing. By tracing the energy diffusion dE = dU (r), iteratively, the model reproduces the simulated DM profiles with similar to 10 per cent accuracy or better. A method based on adiabatic invariants shows similar precision for moderate mass change, but underestimates the DM expansion for strong gas ejection. A method based on a simple empirical relation between DM and total mass ratios makes slightly inferior predictions. The crude assumption used in CuspCore I, of energy conservation for shells that encompass a fixed DM mass, turns out to underestimate the DM response, which can be partially remedied by introducing an alternative 'energy' definition. Our model is being generalized to address the differential response of a multicomponent system of stars and DM in the formation of DM-deficient galaxies.

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