Article contents
Dust and the observed dark matter content of galaxies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 May 2016
Abstract
Using detailed Monte Carlo radiative transfer modeling, we examine the effects of absorption and scattering by interstellar dust on the observed kinematics of galaxies. Our modeling results have a direct impact on the derivation of the properties of dark matter haloes around both elliptical and spiral galaxies. We find that interstellar dust has a very significant effect on the observed stellar kinematics of elliptical galaxies, in the way that it mimics the presence of a dark matter halo. Taking dust into account in kinematical modeling procedures can reduce or even eliminate the need for dark matter at a few effective radii. Dust profoundly affects the optical rotation curve and stellar kinematics of edge-on disc galaxies. This effect, however, is significantly reduced when the galaxy is more than a few degrees from strictly edge-on. These results demonstrate that dust attenuation cannot be invoked as a possible mechanism to reconcile the discrepancies between the observed shallow slopes of LSB galaxy rotation curves and the dark matter cusps found in CDM cosmological simulations.
- Type
- Part 10: Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
- Information
- Symposium - International Astronomical Union , Volume 220: Dark Matter in Galaxies , 2004 , pp. 343 - 344
- Copyright
- Copyright © Astronomical Society of the Pacific 2004
References
- 1
- Cited by