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On the Cusp of the Dark Matter Sergey Mashchenko Hugh Couchman James Wadsley McMaster University ( Nature 3/8/06; Science 29/11/07 )

On the Cusp of the Dark Matter

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On the Cusp of the Dark Matter. Sergey Mashchenko Hugh Couchman James Wadsley McMaster University ( Nature 3/8/06; Science 29/11/07 ). Outline. The problem of “cusps” in standard CDM dark matter haloes Toy model for stellar feedback Self-consistent feedback in live, dwarf haloes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

On the Cusp of the

Dark Matter

Sergey MashchenkoHugh CouchmanJames Wadsley

McMaster University

( Nature 3/8/06; Science 29/11/07 )

Page 2: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Outline

• The problem of “cusps” in standard CDM dark matter haloes

• Toy model for stellar feedback• Self-consistent feedback in live, dwarf haloes

The talk considers the interplay between gas (and the astrophysical processes connected with star formation) and collisionless dark matter in cosmic structure formation

Page 3: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

The Cusp Problem in CDM

• Despite successes of ΛCDM on large and intermediate scales, serious issues remain on smaller, galactic and sub-galactic, scales. In particular:– Theory (simulation) predicts – with a fair

degree of confidence – cuspy inner profiles ~ NFW

– Observations show increasingly strong evidence for flat inner cores ~ Burkert

Page 4: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

de Blok & Bosma, 2002

Battaglia et al., arXiv:0802.4220Kinematic Status and mass content ofThe Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy

“…velocity dispersion profiles are best fitted by a cored dark matter halo with core radiusR_c= 0.5kpc.”

Page 5: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Proposed solutions• Observational problems

– Beam smearing; non-circular motion etc.• New physics

– WDM; self-interacting DM– Modified gravity

• Solutions within standard ΛCDM (requires “heating” of dark matter)– Rotating bar– Passive evolution of cold lumps (e.g., El Zant et al.,

2001)– Recoiling black holes– AGN– “Maximal stellar feedback”/“blowout”

Ideas have variable traction… propose a mechanism that is a natural consequence of structure formation

Page 6: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

• Bulk gas motions in early dwarf galaxies – driven by supernovae and stellar winds - transfer kinetic energy to “heat” the dark matter– Plausible mechanism that must have been

widespread in early, gas-rich dwarfs– Could likely have achieved significant gas

compression in early (small concentration) haloes

– Observe bulk motions of cold gas in present-day dwarfs that are mildly supersonic, have spatial scale similar to that of z>10 dwarfs (few 100pc) and have velocities similar to dark matter dispersion (~10km/s)

• Note: the naïve impact of cooling baryons is to make the cusp steeper

Page 7: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Sag DIG Young & Lo (1997)

500pc

3.2kpc

Believed to be bulk motion resulting from star formation:

<v2> ~ (10 km/s)2

If sufficient gas can be concentrated and moved in bulk, the gravitational potential will fluctuate, resulting in the transfer of kinetic energy from baryons to dark matter.– For σgas << σdm, the dark

matter will adjust adiabatically

– For σgas >> σdm, the dark matter moves only in the time-averaged potential of the gas lumps

– Would not expect sensitivity to gas density

Page 8: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Toy Model• Challenging to do full hydro

simulation of stellar-induced bulk motions in a live dark matter halo, so…

• DM halo: z ~ 10 dwarf galaxy (NFW Mvir=109 M; rvir = 3kpc; rs = 850pc; 106 particles), and

• Model gas bulk motions by forced motion of extended rigid bodies moving through the centre of the halo:– Clumps 40pc; amplitude A=rs/2;

speed 11km/s– For r < A, Mgas ~ Mdm => ~ ½ gas

within r = A

• Simple model allows access to, and control of, key parameters…

N.B: early dwarfs were less concentrated and more gas rich than those at low redshift

Page 9: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Evolution of the DM density profile

t =40 Myr

t =80 Myr

t =140 Myr

V =11 km s-1

mvir=109 M

DM halo

~ 1 fullperiod in DM halo – highly efficient

Oscillationamplitude

Must happen before halo is subsumed into next level of hierarchy

SN 1051 ergs => 80/Myr at ε=10% =>

0.01 M/yr;

gas depletion in 10 Gyr

Page 10: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

ρ(r<A)140 Myr

600 Myr

h = A/2 M → M/2240 Myr

For M → M/4cusp flattening after ~ 800 Myr

Page 11: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

z01030

Epoch of cusp removal by stellar feedback… phase-space density cannot increase in subsequent merger hierarchy

• mvir < 107 M “blowout” – may contribute to effect;

• mvir > 1010 M rotational support/large σDM, small-scale turbulence

Page 12: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Z=150

Self-consistent cosmological simulations4

Mpc

(co

-mov

ing)

Constrained cosmological simulations.

Build-up of an isolated dwarf galaxy (~109 M) over z=10…5.

15 million particles (10 million hi-res).

mDM= 1900 M

mgas= 370 M

mstar= 120 M

ε = 12pc

1.1 × 107 dark

4.5 × 106 gas

4.5 × 105 star

Z=5

Page 13: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Added physics…

• Jeans criterion + low-T metal cooling (10-104 K, from Bromm et al. 2001) for star formation.

• Stochastic stellar feedback; model individual supernovae as point explosions.

• Delayed-cooling feedback (Thacker & Couchman; volume-weighted).

• Pressure (not density) is constant across the SPH smoothing kernel – but only for radiative cooling calculations (~ Ritchie & Thomas 2001).

• 6x105 cpu-hour run

Page 14: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

ISM structureOld New

Critical to model low temperature cooling and to include a Jeans criterion in order to develop (more realistic) spatial star formation inhomogeneity

Page 15: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

DM-only cosmological model

Cosmological simulations of the formation of a dwarf galaxy.

Dark matter only (no gas).

Z=150…5

Page 16: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Cosmologicalsimulations with gas dynamics and stellar feedback.

Central 1.3 kpcof a formingdwarf galaxy.

z = 9…5

Gas is in blue,stars are in yellow

Page 17: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Evolution of enclosed gas mass for different radii

Page 18: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Evolution of the central quantities (r=200 pc)

F =ρ

σ3

Enclosedmass:

Phase spacedensity,

r < 1.6kpc

r < 100pc

Page 19: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Evolution of enclosed DM mass for different radii

DM onlysimulations

Simulationswith feedback

Page 20: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Radial profiles

DM core: 400 pc

Stellar core: 300 pc

η =(σr2 – σt

2)/

(σr2 + σt

2)

Isotropic velocity dispersion in core

Page 21: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Long-lived star clusters

Distance from galacticcentre:

• At birth (z~6.2): σr = 37 pc

• After 200 Myr:

σr = 280 pc

Orbits of “Globular Clusters”

•Stellar feedback also acts on GCs, and•Impact of dynamical friction reduced by flat core (e.g., Fornax)

Page 22: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Stellar population gradients• Have been observed in most dwarf spheroidal galaxies (in

the Local Group).• Older stars are more dispersed, more metal-poor, and

kinematically warmer.• Our model (gravitational heating by bulk gas motions)

naturally explains the observed gradients:– Stars are born near the galactic center, and then gradually pushed

outwards by the feedback.

Age 0 360 Myr

Radial extent 365 pc 637 pc

Velocity disp. 15.6 km s-1 18.3 km s-1

[Fe/H] -1.33 -1.54

Page 23: On the Cusp of the  Dark Matter

Conclusions Gravitational resonant heating of matter appears to

be an inevitable consequence of bulk gas motions driven by stellar feedback in early, gas-rich dwarfs. The result is:– Large dark matter cores– Stellar population gradients.– A distribution of long-lived globular clusters.– Low stellar density and a flat-cored distribution of

stars in dSphs.– May also help resolve the “overabundance of

satellites” problem– May be relevant to dark matter detections