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

Authors :
Genzel R
Schreiber NM
Übler H
Lang P
Naab T
Bender R
Tacconi LJ
Wisnioski E
Wuyts S
Alexander T
Beifiori A
Belli S
Brammer G
Burkert A
Carollo CM
Chan J
Davies R
Fossati M
Galametz A
Genel S
Gerhard O
Lutz D
Mendel JT
Momcheva I
Nelson EJ
Renzini A
Saglia R
Sternberg A
Tacchella S
Tadaki K
Wilman D
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2017 Mar 15; Vol. 543 (7645), pp. 397-401.
Publication Year :
2017

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.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
543
Issue :
7645
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28300118
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature21685