Literature DB >> 28300118

Strongly baryon-dominated disk galaxies at the peak of galaxy formation ten billion years ago.

R Genzel1,2, N M Förster Schreiber1, H Übler1, P Lang1, T Naab3, R Bender1,4, L J Tacconi1, E Wisnioski1, S Wuyts1,5, T Alexander6, A Beifiori1,4, S Belli1, G Brammer7, A Burkert1,3, C M Carollo8, J Chan1, R Davies1, M Fossati1,4, A Galametz1,4, S Genel9, O Gerhard1, D Lutz1, J T Mendel1,4, I Momcheva10, E J Nelson1,10, A Renzini11, R Saglia1,4, A Sternberg12, S Tacchella8, K Tadaki1, D Wilman1,4.   

Abstract

In the cold dark matter cosmology, the baryonic components of galaxies-stars and gas-are thought to be mixed with and embedded in non-baryonic and non-relativistic dark matter, which dominates the total mass of the galaxy and its dark-matter halo. In the local (low-redshift) Universe, the mass of dark matter within a galactic disk increases with disk radius, becoming appreciable and then dominant in the outer, baryonic regions of the disks of star-forming galaxies. This results in rotation velocities of the visible matter within the disk that are constant or increasing with disk radius-a hallmark of the dark-matter model. Comparisons between the dynamical mass, inferred from these velocities in rotational equilibrium, and the sum of the stellar and cold-gas mass at the peak epoch of galaxy formation ten billion years ago, inferred from ancillary data, suggest high baryon fractions in the inner, star-forming regions of the disks. Although this implied baryon fraction may be larger than in the local Universe, the systematic uncertainties (owing to the chosen stellar initial-mass function and the calibration of gas masses) render such comparisons inconclusive in terms of the mass of dark matter. Here we report rotation curves (showing rotation velocity as a function of disk radius) for the outer disks of six massive star-forming galaxies, and find that the rotation velocities are not constant, but decrease with radius. We propose that this trend arises because of a combination of two main factors: first, a large fraction of the massive high-redshift galaxy population was strongly baryon-dominated, with dark matter playing a smaller part than in the local Universe; and second, the large velocity dispersion in high-redshift disks introduces a substantial pressure term that leads to a decrease in rotation velocity with increasing radius. The effect of both factors appears to increase with redshift. Qualitatively, the observations suggest that baryons in the early (high-redshift) Universe efficiently condensed at the centres of dark-matter haloes when gas fractions were high and dark matter was less concentrated.

Year:  2017        PMID: 28300118     DOI: 10.1038/nature21685

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  A cold, massive, rotating disk galaxy 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang.

Authors:  Marcel Neeleman; J Xavier Prochaska; Nissim Kanekar; Marc Rafelski
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-05-20       Impact factor: 49.962

  1 in total

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