Testing adiabatic contraction with Sloan Digital Sky Survey elliptical galaxies

Author: Schulz A. E.   Mandelbaum Rachel   Padmanabhan Nikhil  

Publisher: Oxford University Press

ISSN: 0035-8711

Source: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol.408, Iss.3, 2010-11, pp. : 1463-1475

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Previous Menu Next

Abstract

ABSTRACTWe study the profiles of 75 086 elliptical galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) at both large (70–700 h−170 kpc) and small (∼ 4 h−170 kpc) scales. Weak lensing observations in the outskirts of the halo are combined with measurements of the stellar velocity dispersion in the interior regions of the galaxy for stacked galaxy samples. The weak lensing measurements are well characterized by a Navarro, Frenk and White (NFW) profile. The dynamical mass measurements exceed the extrapolated NFW profile even after the estimated stellar masses are subtracted, providing evidence for the modification of the dark matter profile by the baryons. This excess mass is quantitatively consistent with the predictions of the adiabatic contraction (AC) hypothesis. Our finding suggests that the effects of AC during galaxy formation are stable to subsequent bombardment from major and minor mergers. We explore several theoretical and observational systematics and conclude that they cannot account for the inferred mass excess. The most significant source of systematic error is in the initial mass function (IMF), which would have to increase the stellar mass estimates by a factor of two relative to the Kroupa IMF to fully explain the mass excess without AC. Such an increase could be achieved by switching from a Kroupa to a Salpeter IMF (with cut-off at 0.1 M ), but doing so would cause significant tension with results from SAURON. We demonstrate a connection between the level of contraction of the dark matter halo profile and scatter in the size luminosity relation, which is a projection of the fundamental plane. Whether or not AC is the mechanism supplying the excess mass, models of galaxy formation and evolution must reconcile the observed halo masses from weak lensing with the comparatively large dynamical masses at the half-light radii of the galaxies.

Related content