MASS DISTRIBUTION OF A SAMPLE OF 23 GALAXIES Olivia Garrido (Observatoire de Paris-Meudon) C. Carignan, P. Amram, C. Balkowski, M. Marcelin THE DARK MATTER PROBLEM At the end of the seventies, thanks to the radioastronomy : →The rotation curves are constant at large radius oppositely to the luminous profile (Freeman, 1970; Bosma, 1978; van Albada, 1985; Begeman, 1987). Problem : 90% of the total mass of a galaxy is not visible and only detectable by its gravitational effects. 3 solutions : →MOND (modification of the Newton law at the scale of galaxies; Milgrom, 1983). → Magnetic model (Nelson, 1988; Battaner et al., 1992). → Assumption of the presence of dark matter. How to study the distribution of the dark matter? We need to know : - Light distribution (stellar mass). - Gas distribution (gas mass). - Rotation curve (total mass). Hybrid rotation curves (RC) combining Hα+HI data are necessary : -HI RC are affected by beam-smearing & low spatial resolution (around 15' or 30'). -Mass distribution parameters strongly depend on the inner slope of RCs (Blais-Ouellette et al., 2001; Amram&Garrido, 2002). Hα ROTATION CURVES →provided by the GHASP survey. GHASP ≅ Gassendi HAlpha survey of Spirals • 220 nearby isolated Spirals and Irregulars. • Fabry-Perot observations at the O.H.P (France). • 2D Hα velocity fields (1.7''/pixel; 5.8''x5.8'') • Rotation curves with high spatial (3'') and spectral resolution (around 5 km/s) combined with HI rotation curves for the spatial extension. • Accurate determination of the inner slope of the RCs. see poster N°2.33 about GHASP THE STATE OF THE ART… • Observational point of view : -Dwarfs and Irregulars mainly studied (Blais-Ouellette et al., 1999, 2001; Swaters, 1999; Côté et al., 2000; de Blok & Bosma, 2003; Gentile et al., 2004). -Dark halos have constant central density : galaxies have core halos. • Theoretical point of view : -Dark halos are cuspy (Moore et al., 1994, 1998, 1999; Navarro et al., 1996, 1997) : the density of dark matter increases in the central parts. • Our sample : 23 galaxies ranging from Irr to Sb galaxies. Dark matter density profiles the density profiles family of Zhao (1996) : ρ (r) = ρo r α (1 + ( ) ) ro β −γ α r γ ( ) ro Two profiles adopted : NFW (cuspy halo) : (α, β, γ) = (1,3,1) Isothermal sphere (core halo) : (α, β, γ) = (2,3,0) ro, ρo : free parameters Difference between the NFW and the Isothermal sphere profiles Our 23 hybrid RCs are best fitted with a density profile of core halo. ← IsoT sphere profile Very good fit NWF : not able to fit the inner parts of the RC → Letting the inner slope of the dark matter, γ, free to vary, no value of γ>0.8 was found! No correlation has been found between γ and VMAX (the maximal rotational velocity) : disagreement with the models of core halos formed by violent ejection of baryonic matter (Navarro et al., 1996; Gelato & Sommer-Larsen, 1999; van den Bosch et al., 2000). CONCLUSION •Our results based on high resolution kinematical data (combining Hα and HI data) suggest that dark halos have constant central density. •No value of γ above 0.8 : in total contradiction with the results deduced from cosmological simulations which predict values of γ>1. •This work extends to Sc/Sd galaxies the result previously found for dwarf and irregular galaxies.
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