The sample of the Local Volume galaxies (distance smaller than 10 Mpc)
gives a unique opportunity to study the properties of galaxies including
the weakest objects: the absolute magnitude MB≈-10
and the virial mass Mvir≈109M☼.
We found out that the standard ΛCDM model precisely describes
the distribution function of galactic circular velocities for massive objects
(Vcirc>~70 km s-1 and
Mvir>~5x1010M☼)
but five times overestimates the number of dwarf galaxies with circular
velocities of Vcirc~30-40 km s-1.
Such a considerable overabundance of predicted big dwarf field galaxies
with masses Mvir≈1010M☼
causes a complicated problem: to prove they are lost, these galaxies
should be of extremely low surface brightness, with no star formation
processes and no neutral hydrogen. Up to now, there has been no such
galaxy detected.
The abundance of galaxies as a function of their circular velocities dN/dV
is fundamental statistics that is very sensitive for theoretical prediction
checking. These studies became possible only recently, as they are
complicated to obtain. The Local Volume (D<10 Mpc) allows us to study
the circular velocity function for the galaxies of all morphological
types up to the smallest ones. We have found that the observed velocity
function shows a small inclination α≈-1
for small velocities and relatively steep inclination at great velocities.
The velocity function of the Local Volume comply with the same function
in the significantly fuller sample ALFAFA based on the HI observations
corrected for 10-20% fraction of early-type galaxies non-detectable in
neutral hydrogen. Thus, we can now construct the velocity function
with ~10% accuracy for galaxies of all types in the velocity range
of 10 to 200 km s-1.
We compared the galaxies of the Local Volume with theoretical predictions
and found that for comparatively massive galaxies with
V>~70 km s-1 and
masses Mvir>~5x1010M☼, the ΛCDM
standard model is in agreement with the observed abundance of galaxies.
However, the small inclination and the normalization of velocity function
for dwarf galaxies with V<40 km s-1 contradict the standard
model which predicts the inclination α≈-3
for the dark matter halo from the cosmological N-body modeling.
Moreover, the models with warm dark matter also can not explain
the observed data irrespective of particle masses.
The overabundance of the field galaxies differs in a number of aspects
from the similar problem of the overabundance of satellites in the Local
Group. As distinct from the Local Group, where the problem arises with
gas-poor dwarf spheroidal galaxies with V~10 km s-1 and at
small distances (≤1 kpc), in the field, the problem arises with
gas-rich galaxies with star formation process with circular velocities
of about 30-40 km s-1 and at great distances (≥2 kpc)
from massive objects.
A.Klypin, I.Karachentsev, D.Makarov, O.Nasonova
Published:
A.Klypin, I.Karachentsev, D.Makarov, and O.Nasonova "Abundance of
field galaxies", 2015, MNRAS, 454, 1798
Contact - D.Makarov
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