4.7 Article

How far do they go?: The outer structure of galactic dark matter halos

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 645, Issue 2, Pages 1001-1011

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/504456

Keywords

cosmology : theory; dark matter; galaxies : halos; galaxies : structure; methods : numerical

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We study the density profiles of collapsed galaxy-size dark matter halos with masses 10(11) to 5 x 10(12) M-circle dot focusing mostly on the halo outer regions from the formal virial radius R-vir up to 5R(vir)-7R(vir). We find that isolated halos in this mass range extend well beyond Rvir exhibiting all properties of virialized objects up to 2R(vir)-3R(vir): 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 the virial radius. We provide an accurate fit for the density profile of these isolated galaxy-size halos. For a wide range 0.01R(vir)-2R(vir) of radii the halo density profiles are fitted with the approximation rho = rho(s) exp [-2n(x(1/n) - 1)] + , where x equivalent to r/r(s), 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 gives excellent results beyond 2 - 3 formal virial radii for the most probable profile and qualitatively correct predictions for the mean profile.

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