The bar rotation rate as a diagnostic of dark matter content in the centre of disc galaxies

Buttitta, C.; Corsini, E. M.; Aguerri, J. A. L.; Coccato, L.; Costantin, L.; Cuomo, V.; Debattista, V. P.; Morelli, L.; Pizzella, A.
Bibliographical reference

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Advertised on:
5
2023
Number of authors
9
IAC number of authors
1
Citations
6
Refereed citations
5
Description
We investigate the link between the bar rotation rate and dark matter content in barred galaxies by concentrating on the cases of the lenticular galaxies NGC 4264 and NGC 4277. These two gas-poor galaxies have similar morphologies, sizes, and luminosities. But, NGC 4264 hosts a fast bar, which extends to nearly the corotation, while the bar embedded in NGC 4277 is slow and falls short of corotation. We derive the fraction of dark matter fDM, bar within the bar region from Jeans axisymmetric dynamical models by matching the stellar kinematics obtained with the MUSE integral-field spectrograph and using SDSS images to recover the stellar mass distribution. We build mass-follows-light models as well as mass models with a spherical halo of dark matter, which is not tied to the stars. We find that the inner regions of NGC 4277 host a larger fraction of dark matter ($f_{\rm DM, bar}\, =\, 0.53\pm 0.02$) with respect to NGC 4264 ($f_{\rm DM, bar}\, =\, 0.33\pm 0.04$) in agreement with the predictions of theoretical works and the findings of numerical simulations, which have found that fast bars live in baryon-dominated discs, whereas slow bars experienced a strong drag from the dynamical friction due to a dense DM halo. This is the first time that the bar rotation rate is coupled to fDM, bar derived from dynamical modelling.
Related projects
Abell 370 is located approximately 4 billion light-years away in the constellation Cetus, the Sea Monster
Galaxy Evolution in Clusters of Galaxies

Galaxies in the universe can be located in different environments, some of them are isolated or in low density regions and they are usually called field galaxies. The others can be located in galaxy associations, going from loose groups to clusters or even superclusters of galaxies. One of the foremost challenges of the modern Astrophysics is to

Jairo
Méndez Abreu