IATE   20350
INSTITUTO DE ASTRONOMIA TEORICA Y EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
The Sphericalization of Dark Matter Halos by Galaxy Disks
Autor/es:
KAZANTZIDIS, STELIOS; ABADI, MARIO G.; NAVARRO, JULIO F.
Revista:
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Editorial:
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Chicago; Año: 2010 vol. 720 p. 62 - 66
ISSN:
0004-637X
Resumen:
Cosmological simulations indicate that cold dark matter (CDM) halos
should be triaxial. Validating this theoretical prediction is, however,
less than straightforward because the assembly of galaxies is expected
to modify halo shapes and to render them more axisymmetric. We use a
suite of N-body simulations to quantitatively investigate the
effect of the growth of a central disk galaxy on the shape of triaxial
dark matter halos. In most circumstances, the halo responds to the
presence of the disk by becoming more spherical. The net effect depends
weakly on the timescale of the disk assembly but noticeably on the
orientation of the disk relative to the halo principal axes, and it is
maximal when the disk symmetry axis is aligned with the major axis of
the halo. The effect depends most sensitively on the overall
gravitational importance of the disk. Our results indicate that
exponential disks whose contribution peaks at less than ~50% of their
circular velocity are unable to noticeably modify the shape of the
gravitational potential of their surrounding halos. Many dwarf and low
surface brightness galaxies are expected to be in this regime, and
therefore their detailed kinematics could be used to probe halo
triaxiality, one of the basic predictions of the CDM paradigm. We argue
that the complex disk kinematics of the dwarf galaxy NGC 2976 might be
the reflection of a triaxial halo. Such signatures of halo triaxiality
should be common in galaxies where the luminous component is
subdominant.

