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The mass distribution of the Fornax dSph : constraints from its globular cluster distribution arXiv:1205.6327. David Cole, University of Leicester Walter Dehnen; Mark Wilkinson – University of Leicester; Justin Read – ETH Zurich 29 June 2012. The Local group dwarfs. Intensively studied
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The mass distribution of the FornaxdSph: constraints from its globular cluster distributionarXiv:1205.6327 David Cole, University of Leicester Walter Dehnen; Mark Wilkinson – University of Leicester; Justin Read – ETH Zurich 29 June 2012
The Local group dwarfs • Intensively studied • Identify substructure in cosmological simulations with satellite galaxies • Dark matter dominated • Deduce the mass structure
Measuring the DM density • Good kinematic data • Should be able to infer the density profile • Jeans modelling • Problems Walker et al MNRAS 2009
Distinct stellar populations • Some dSphs have more than one identifiable stellar population. • Sculptor data (Amorisco and Evans MNRAS 2011) • Use methods which do not require an assumed dark matter profile Cusped Cored Surface brightness for metal poor pop. (blue), metal rich pop. (red)
Fornax • One of the more massive dSphs with 5 Globular Clusters (GCs) • Unique in having GCs • Sagitarius and Canis Major have some but tidally disrupted (d~24 & 7 kpc) • The GCs are old and metal poor • Age ~old MW GCs 5 1 3 4 2
The Timing Problem • DM cusp GCs should fall to the centre of Fornax due to dynamical friction • Form a Nuclear Star Cluster – Tremaine et al 1975 • No central star cluster seen Circular orbits & cusped density profile From Goerdt et al MNRAS 2006
Is there a failure of dynamical friction? • N-body simulations show that dynamical friction ceases at the edge of a density core • Harmonic core effect • Could explain why we see GCs at a finite distance from centre of Fornax • Goerdt et al 2006 • Can we improve on this study? From Read et al MNRAS 2006
Two issues • Long Term timing problem • Immediate timing problem
Evidence for dynamical friction? • Distribution of globular clusters in mass and projected distance from the centre of Fornax • Dashed vertical line indicates the stellar half-light radius of the dSph • Similar distribution to the stars • Trend with mass?
Examine using best observations • Distance and velocity data cannot place the GCs with sufficient accuracy • Distance to Fornax ~138+/- 8 kpc • These all overlap => line of sight separation uncertain • Alternatives?
Statistical method • Plausible models • GC models: • Have projected distances • Make kinematics same as stars • Have line of sight velocities • Uniform distribution of line of sight distances • Can create a range of plausible mass models consistent with observations • Run thousands of simulations
Create mass models • Models based on MCMC modelling (Mark Wilkinson to be published) • Best fit Cusp (SC) • Best fit Core (WC) • Best fit Intermediate (IC) • Density profile : • Also model with large core based on Walker and Penarrubia MNRAS 2011 – Large core (LC)
Match to kinematic data • Feed back models into the kinematic data as a consistency check • BUT matching our models to the kinematics is not the aim of this project Data points from Walker et al MNRAS 2009
Results • Apo-centric radii after 2 and 10 Gyr. • Shaded region indicates the current tidal radius of Fornax. • The thin horizontal lines indicate the observed projected radius
Density Reduction • SC and IC models, the central density profiles are significantly reduced • Only model SC is reduction stronger when clusters have reached the core of Fornax
Results • Orbits with large initial rapo are not significantly affected by dynamical friction • Cluster GC3 most affected by dynamical friction, followed by GC4 and GC2, while GC1 and GC5 least affected after 2Gyr • Cluster GC3 always reaches the core of Fornax within 10Gyr (except for model LC) • Dynamical friction effect at 2Gyr is increasing with the central mass density from model WC to SC, as expected • The effect of dynamical fricion after 10Gyr is more similar for the three halo models with weak to steep cusps than after 2Gyr
Probability of Clusters Sinking • Need quantity for each simulated cluster which would follow a known distribution with orbital phase and projection angle drawn randomly. • Use P(R≤Rp | orbit) • Our initial distribution of P(R≤Rp | orbit) is non-uniform • Weight simulated cluster orbits consistent with uniform sampling.
Results Weak Cusp Steep Cusp • Colours show different GCs • Red – GC1; Blue – GC2; Green – GC3; Magenta – GC4; Cyan – GC5
Correlation of p(R ≤ Rp|orbit) and rapo • Correlation between p(R ≤ Rp|orbit) and rapo at later times • Applies over a wide range of eccentricities • e<0.4 open symbols; e≥0.4 crosses; [e=(rapo−rperi)/(rapo+rperi)] • For models IC and SC, some differentiation between these two groups of initial orbits • At t = 2Gyr eccentric orbits smaller rapo because they have smaller initial rperi and hence suffer more dynamical friction) • Exception: if the observed R was initially untypically small (when they spend most of their time at large radii).
Quantitative estimates • Probability (rapo < 2.8kpc) falls in • Depends on the mass model and the eccentricity of the initial orbit. • Doesn’t depend on distribution function
Two Solutions • Fornax has a large core • Fornax has a small core or shallow cusp
Where did the GCs originate? • If we have an evolving solution • GCs at or near tidal radius a Hubble time ago • Fits with weak evidence of mass segregation • The GCs have not formed within Fornax, but are most likely accreted
Caveats • Our models all assume a spherical mass distribution for Fornax • The tidal field of the Milky Way • The inner dynamics of the GCs and tidal interaction with Fornax
Large core behaviour Orbit for GC3 • In the large core if the GC starts inside the core the orbit moves out (!) to the edge of the core • Under investigation • Paper by Tremaine and Weinberg 1984 may offer partial explanation r kpc time Gyr
The Case of GC1 • Why should the one cluster vulnerable to tides be on an orbit where it would hardly ever suffer disruption? • Steady-state solution: Fornax once had a richer globular-cluster system and we only see the survivors. • Evolving solution: low-mass clusters, such as GC1, would not be dragged down much, and there is no need to postulate a large early population of clusters. • It is a collisional system and so it has expanded by internal 2-body relaxation => could have had a higher density in the past Gieles et al 2010.
Conclusions • The more cusped density profiles are much more likely to cause GCs to fall to the centre of a dwarf galaxy • For cusped mass models clusters GC3 or GC4 will sink into the centre of Fornax within 1-2Gyr with ∼ 90% probability • Fornax has a large core and dynamical friction is slow or has stalled a long time ago. • Fornax has a small core or shallow cusp and dynamical friction is still ongoing, albeit slowly and the clusters must have been further away from Fornax in the past than today.
The cusp/core problem Observations Theory Oh et al 2008 IC 2574 Navarro et al 2010
Large Core model • Walker and Penarrubia 2011, ApJ 742, 20 • Model as two chemodynamically distinct stellar subcomponents • constrain model parameters using MCMC • Estimates of mass enclosed at the half-light radius
Results after 2 Gyr • Initial distribution is uniform in line of sight distance between 0 and 2 kpc (~tidal radius) • Bin the GC instantaneous apocentre • Colours show different mass models • Cyan – Steep Cusp (SC) • Red – Intermediate Cusp (IC) • Black – Weak Cusp (WC) • Green – Large Core (LC)
Results after 10 Gyr • Uniform line of sight distance distribution • Cyan – Steep Cusp (SC) • Red – Intermediate Cusp (IC) • Black – Weak Cusp (WC) • Green – Large Core (LC)