Research Division Seminar
Galaxies lacking dark matter in the LCDM paradigm

Dr. Jorge Moreno

Abstract

The standard cold dark matter plus cosmological constant model predicts that galaxies form within dark-matter haloes, and that low-mass galaxies are more dark-matter dominated than massive ones. The unexpected discovery of two low-mass galaxies lacking dark matter immediately provoked concerns about the standard cosmology and ignited explorations of alternatives, including self-interacting dark matter and modified gravity. Apprehension grew after several cosmological simulations using the conventional model failed to form adequate numerical analogues with comparable internal characteristics (stellar masses, sizes, velocity dispersions and morphologies). Here we show that the standard paradigm naturally produces galaxies lacking dark matter with internal characteristics in agreement with observations. Using a state-of-the-art cosmological simulation and a meticulous galaxy-identification technique, we find that extreme close encounters with massive neighbours can be responsible for this. We predict that ~30% of massive central galaxies (with at least 1e11 solar masses in stars) harbour at least one dark-matter-deficient satellite (with 1e8–1e9 solar masses in stars). This distinctive class of galaxies provides an additional layer in our understanding of the role of interactions in shaping galactic properties. Future observations surveying galaxies in the aforementioned regime will provide a crucial test of this scenario.

 

Zoom link:

 https://rediris.zoom.us/j/88931895195?pwd=dUxhQ3F5bWU4UjI2TDI0UFBScWwxdz09

Meeting ID: 889 3189 5195

Passcode: 854083

 

YouTube: https://youtu.be/MaU3lRr4Lb8

About the talk

Galaxies lacking dark matter in the LCDM paradigm
Dr. Jorge Moreno
Pomona College
Thursday June 9, 2022 - 10:30 GMT+1  (Aula)
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