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Galactic & Stellar Dynamics
C. Boily, P. Patsis, S. Portegies Zwart, R. Spurzem and C. Theis (eds)
EAS Publications Series, Vol. 10, 2003
DOI: 10.1051/eas:2003136
Constraints on the Clumpiness of Dark Matter Halos Through Heating of Disk Galaxies
E. Ardi1, 2, T. Tsuchiya1 and A. Burkert31 Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Heidelberg, Germany
2 Department of Astronomy, Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia
3 Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract
Motivated by the presence of numerous dark matter clumps in the Milky
Way's halo as expected from the cold dark matter cosmological model,
we conduct numerical simulations to examine the heating of the disk. We
construct an initial galaxy model in equilibrium, with a stable thin disk.
The disk interacts with dark matter clumps for
about 5 Gyr. Three physical effects are examined: first the mass
spectrum of the dark matter clumps, second the initial thickness of
the galactic disk, and third the spatial distribution of
the clumps. We find that the massive end of the mass spectrum
determines the amount of disk heating. Thicker disks suffer less
heating. There is a certain thickness at which the heating owing to the
interaction with the clumps saturates. We also find that the
heating produced by the model which mimics the distribution found in
Standard CDM cosmology is significant and too high to explain the
observational constraints. On the other hand, our model that corresponds to
the clump distribution in a
CDM cosmology produces no significant
heating. This result suggests that the
CDM cosmology is
preferable with respect to the Standard CDM cosmology in explaining the
thickness of the Milky Way.
© EAS, EDP Sciences 2003
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